Current:Home > ScamsSerbia’s populists look to further tighten grip on power in tense election -Wealth Axis Pro
Serbia’s populists look to further tighten grip on power in tense election
View
Date:2025-04-16 05:59:59
BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Serbia’s populist President Aleksandar Vucic is looking to further tighten his grip on power in an election on Sunday that has been marred by reports of major irregularities during a tense campaign.
The main contest in the parliamentary and local elections is expected to be between Vucic’s governing right-wing Serbian Progressive Party, or SNS, and a centrist coalition that is trying to undermine the populists who have ruled the troubled Balkan state since 2012.
The Serbia Against Violence opposition list is expected to mount the biggest challenge for the city council in Belgrade. An opposition victory in the capital would seriously dent Vucic’s hardline rule in the country, analysts say.
“Changes in Serbia have started and there is no force that can stop that,” said Dragan Djilas, the opposition coalition leader, after he voted in Belgrade. “We, as the strongest opposition list, will defend people’s will by all democratic means.”
Several right-wing groups, including pro-Russian parties and Socialists allied with Vucic are also running for control of the 250-seat parliament and local councils in some 60 cities and towns, as well as regional authorities in the northern Vojvodina province.
The election does not include the presidency, but governing authorities backed by dominant pro-government media have run the campaign as a referendum on Vucic.
Although he is not formally on the ballot, the Serbian president has campaigned relentlessly for the SNS, which appears on the ballot under the name “Aleksandar Vucic — Serbia must not stop!” The main opposition Serbia Against Violence pro-European Union bloc includes parties that were behind months of street protests this year triggered by two back-to-back mass shootings in May.
The Serbian president has been touring the country and attending his party’s rallies, promising new roads, hospitals and one-off cash bonuses. Vucic’s image is seen on billboards all over the country, though he has stepped down as SNS party leader.
Even before the vote started on Sunday, campaign monitors reported pressure on voters, fearmongering and abuse of public office and institutions fostered by the authorities. There have also been reports of vote-buying and voter-bribing.
Serbia, a Balkan country that has maintained warm relations with Vladimir Putin’s Russia, has been a candidate for EU membership since 2014 but has faced allegations of steadily eroding democratic freedoms and rules over the past years.
Both Vucic and the SNS have denied allegations of campaign abuse and attempted vote-rigging, as well as charges that Vucic as president is violating the constitution by campaigning for one party.
Hardly any of the complaints or recommendations by local and foreign observers have resulted in changes in the voting process.
Vucic called the Dec. 17 snap vote only a year and a half after a previous parliamentary and presidential election, although his party holds a comfortable majority in the parliament.
Analysts say Vucic is seeking to consolidate power after two back-to-back shootings triggered months of anti-government protests, and as high inflation and rampant corruption fueled public discontent. Vucic has also faced criticism over his handling of a crisis in Kosovo, a former Serbian province that declared independence in 2008, a move that Belgrade does not recognize.
His supporters view Vucic as the only leader who can maintain stability and lead the country into a better future.
“I think it’s time that Serbia goes forward with full steam,” Lazar Mitrovic, a pensioner, said after he voted. “That means that it should focus on its youth, on young people, education and of course discipline.”
Major polling agencies have refrained from publishing pre-election surveys, citing fear among Serbia’s 6.5 million eligible voters and high polarization.
___
AP writer Jovana Gec contributed.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Forget Nvidia: Billionaire Bill Ackman owns $1.9 billion worth of Alphabet stock
- Participant, studio behind ‘Spotlight,’ ‘An Inconvenient Truth,’ shutters after 20 years
- Mayor of North Carolina’s capital city won’t seek reelection this fall
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- How Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones Hilariously Seduce Their Kids with Fancy Vacations
- The Daily Money: Big cuts at Best Buy
- Carl Erskine, Dodgers legend and human rights icon, dies: 'The best guy I've ever known'
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- IRS reprieve: Places granted tax relief due to natural disasters
Ranking
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Home values rising in Detroit, especially for Black homeowners, study shows
- Buffalo Sabres fire coach Don Granato after team's playoff drought hits 13 seasons
- Carl Erskine, Dodgers legend and human rights icon, dies: 'The best guy I've ever known'
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- 13-year-old girl killed, 12-year-old boy in custody after shooting at Iowa home
- Carl Erskine, Dodgers legend and human rights icon, dies: 'The best guy I've ever known'
- NPR suspends editor who criticized his employer for what he calls an unquestioned liberal worldview
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Draft report says Missouri’s House speaker stymied ethics investigation into his spending
Supreme Court appears divided over obstruction law used to prosecute Trump, Jan. 6 rioters
Powerball winning numbers for April 15 drawing with $63 million jackpot at stake
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Mark Cuban shares his 9-figure tax bill on IRS due day
Another record for New Jersey internet gambling revenue as in-person winnings struggle
Woman pleads guilty for role in 4 slayings stemming from custody dispute, sentenced to life