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Alliance of Independent Social Democrats

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bosnian Serb political party

Alliance of Independent Social Democrats
Савез независних социјалдемократа
Savez nezavisnih socijaldemokrata
AbbreviationSNSD (СНСД)
LeaderMilorad Dodik
Founded10 March 1996; 29 years ago (1996-03-10)
HeadquartersBanja Luka
Youth wingYoung Social Democrats
Women's wingActive Woman Social Democratic
Membership192,707[1]
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left[6] toleft-wing[7][A]
International affiliationSocialist International (2008–2012)
For the Freedom of Nations! (since 2024)
HoR BiH
6 / 42
HoP BiH
3 / 15
HoP FBiH
2 / 80
NA RS
29 / 83
Mayors
48 / 145
Party flag
Flag of the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats
Website
www.snsd.org

^ A: The party is also described as right-wing,[8] centre-left economically,[9]left-conservative,[10]right-wing nationalist,[11] or a "centre left-wing party but simultaneously extremely radical right-wing".[12]

TheAlliance of Independent Social Democrats (Serbian:Савез независних социјалдемократа,СНСД,romanizedSavez nezavisnih socijaldemokrata,SNSD) is aSerbnationalist political party inBosnia and Herzegovina. Founded in 1996, it is the governing party inRepublika Srpska. The party's vice-president,Željka Cvijanović, is the current member of thePresidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, while party memberAna Trišić-Babić is serving as the current actingpresident of Republika Srpska. SNSD memberSavo Minić is the currentprime minister of Republika Srpska as well.

The creation of the SNSD can be traced back to the Independent Members of Parliament Group, which eventually grew to become theParty of Independent Social Democrats. During this time, the party served as the only opposition to the dominance of theultra-nationalistSerb Democratic Party (SDS), which was led byRadovan Karadžić for the majority of the 1990s. The SNSD was seen as a moderate and non-extremist alternative to the SDS, with many of its members, including current leaderMilorad Dodik, being part of the former non-nationalist and multi-ethnicUnion of Reform Forces of Yugoslavia.

The SNSD's first real electoral success was recorded in 2006, where it won 41 of the 83 seats in theNational Assembly of Republika Srpska, attracting 44.95% of the popular vote. Since then, the party has gradually abandoned its reformist ideology for more assertive advocacy ofSerbian nationalism, threatening thesecession of Republika Srpska from the rest of Bosnia and Herzegovina numerous times.[13][14][15][16] This has also led to the party being expelled from theSocialist International in 2012 for "continuing to espouse a nationalist and extremist line".[17][18]

History

[edit]

1991–1996

[edit]

The party grew out of the Independent Members of Parliament Caucus (IMPC), known as "the club", of theNational Assembly of Republika Srpska (NSRS) in 1996.[2] The club was in opposition to theSerb Democratic Party (SDS) during theBosnian War (1992–96).[2] The IMPC was established from the caucus ofethnic Serb members of the Parliament of theSocialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina elected in 1990 from the election list of theUnion of Reform Forces.[citation needed] The Serb members of the Parliament ofSR Bosnia and Herzegovina, the majority of theSerb Democratic Party (SDS), including the members of the IMPC, established the Assembly of the Serb People of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 24 October 1991 (later renamed National Assembly of the Republika Srpska), following the majority of the parliament (mostlyCroats andBosniaks) approved the "Memorandum on Sovereignty" on 15 October 1991. In 1992, the Bosnian parliament heldan independence referendum which led to the declaration of theRepublic of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Milorad Dodik has been the party's president since its foundation in 1996

The absolute majority of the newly founded NSRS was from the SDS. The IMPC was the only parliamentary opposition from the founding of the National Assembly through the first post-warelections in September 1996. The Party of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD) participated in the elections in the "Union for Peace and Progress" coalition along with theSocialist Party of RS (SPRS) and a minor party.[2] The club and later party (SNSD) was chaired by Milorad Dodik.[2]

1997–2004

[edit]

By the time of the next local elections in 1997, about twenty municipal committees had been formed. It ran independently in 24 municipalities of the Republic of Srpska, mainly in Krajina and Posavina.[19] In 1997, there was a split in the Serb Democratic Party, in whichBiljana Plavšić, the president of Repubika Srpska left the party following internal clashes.[20] The People’s Assembly of Republika Srpska was dissolved. Parliamentary elections were held simultaneously with local elections. The Party of Independent Social Democrats received twice as much support compared to the previous elections just a year earlier.[19] The then western-backed Plavšić nominated Dodik for Prime Minister and he was elected in the January 1998 elections, largely being seen as a moderate.[2][21] In the party's early years it was active in the "Sloga" (unity) coalition with Plavšić'sSerb National Alliance and theSocialist Party, whose leader at the time wasŽivko Radišić. In 1998, another parliamentary election was held. In the elections for the People’s Assembly of Republika Srpska, the Party of Independent Social Democrats won 6 parliamentary seats.[19]

1999 was marked by difficulties in the region, including theNATO bombing of Yugoslavia and internal strife with the blockade of the work of the Government by the People’s Assembly, a vote of no-confidence and the removal ofNikola Poplašen from the post of President of Republika Srpska by the High RepresentativeCarlos Westendorp. Meanwhile, the government led by Dodik received significant support from international institutions.[19]

In December 1999, the Social Liberal Party of Republika Srpska merged into the SNSD. After local elections in 2000Nikola Špirić'sDemocratic Socialist Party (DSP) merged into it in 2001. The SNSD then changed its name to the "Alliance of Independent Social Democrats", keeping its old abbreviation.[22] DSP was a splinter party of the SPRS. At the Unifying Congress in May 2002, it elected Milorad Dodik as president of the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats, withNebojša Radmanović as president of the Executive Committee. Vinko Đuragić's New Workers' Party also joined the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats.[19] In August 2002, the New Labour Party of Republika Srpska merged into the SNSD.

In the elections held on 5 October 2002, the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats won the largest number of parliamentary seats since its creation, receiving 19 seats in the People’s Assembly of Republika Srpska, 3 deputies in the Parliament of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and 1 deputy in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Alliance of Independent Social Democrats received 7 seats in the Council of Peoples of Republika Srpska and 3 seats in the Council of Peoples of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Moderate political parties were offered a partnership to form a new government, but theParty of Democratic Progress decided to remain in the pact with the nationalist parties, so the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats accepted the role of the strongest opposition party, not only in the Republic of Srpska but throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina.[19]

In this period, the party launched a campaign to collect signatures, with the goal of abolishing conscription into the army and demilitarization of the country.[19]

In the 2004 elections, with around 125,000 votes, the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats became the strongest party in Republika Srpska and the second in terms of votes in Bosnia and Herzegovina. 17 mayor positions were won, 15 of which were in Republika Srpska, and 2 in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The number of council seats, compared to the previous local elections four years earlier was much higher, and they were won in all candidate municipalities in Republika Srpska, and 9 municipalities in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. After the establishment of municipal assemblies, the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats has 22 municipal presidents and a larger number of deputy mayors and vice presidents of municipal assemblies.[19]

The end of 2004 was marked by the resignation of the republican government headed by Dragan Mikerević. After an unsuccessful two-year mandate, the Government resigns, and the political parties of the Republic of Srpska reach an Agreement on coordinated political action, to define the strategic relationship towards the constitutional arrangement and upcoming reforms: police and defence.[19]

2006–present: Breakthrough and rule

[edit]

At the beginning of 2006, the previous prime minister of the Republic of Srpska, Pero Bukejlović, resigned. Ten days after that, on 26 January 2006, the president of the Republic of Srpska,Dragan Čavić, asked Milorad Dodik to form a new government, in which, according to the Constitution, there are 16 ministers: eight Serbs, five Bosniaks and three Croats. The Parliament of Republika Srpska supported the appointment of Dodik as Prime Minister on 28 February 2006.

The Alliance of Independent Social Democrats achieved their breakthrough in the 2006 general elections in Bosnia and Herzegovina.Nebojša Radmanović was elected as the Serb member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In the House of Representatives of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats won 7 seats with 269,468 votes ahead of the Party of Democratic Action with 238,474 (9 seats) and the Party for Bosnia and Herzegovina with 219,477 votes (8 seats). Milan Jelić became the President of Republika Srpska (271,022 votes, 48.87%). The party won 41 out of 83 parliamentary seats in the People’s Assembly of Republika Srpska, and Milorad Dodik, the president of the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats, became the representative for the composition of the new Republika Srpska government. In the House of Representatives of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats won 1 place with 12,564 votes (1.46%). The Alliance of Independent Social Democrats won 3 out of 25 seats in the Assembly of Canton 10 in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (3,654 votes, 11.99%).[23]

In the General Elections of 2010, the Alliance of Independent Social Democrats repeated their good result from 2006, and at all levels defeated the united opposition in the coalition Zajedno za Srpska (Serb Democratic Party-Party of Democratic Progress-Serb Radical Party of Republic of Srpska).

The joint candidate of the "Alliance of Independent Social Democrats-Democratic People's Alliance-Socialist Party" coalition for the Serb member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nebojša Radmanović, received 295,629 votes, i.e. 48.92% of the total number of valid votes. The most significant opponent, the candidate of the Zajedno za Srpska coalition,Mladen Ivanić, received 285,951 votes, or 47.31% of valid votes. A large number of invalid ballots, and a small difference between the two most important candidates, resulted in a complaint by Mladen Ivanić and his Party of Democratic Progress about irregularities during the counting of ballots. The Central Election Commission put an end to such doubts by recognizing the election results.[24]

Milorad Dodik, the candidate of the coalition "Alliance of Independent Social Democrats-Democratic People's Alliance-Socialist Party" for the president of Republika Srpska achieved a convincing victory, receiving the support of 50.52% of voters, i.e. 319,618 valid votes.

In the elections for the People’s Assembly of the Republic of Srpska, the party won 38% of the valid votes cast (240,727 votes) and received 37 parliamentary mandates, which was enough for the party to preserve the parliamentary majority in the coalition with the Democratic People's Alliance and the Socialist Party.[citation needed]

In the elections for the Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the party in the Republic of Srpska won 43.30% of the votes or 8 representatives.[25]

The2014 general elections saw the SNSD enter the race with a coalition of smaller parties; the Democratic People's Alliance and the Socialist Party. The SNSD became the main ruling party of Republika Srpska for the third consecutive time, gaining 29 seats in the Assembly with Dodik re-elected.[26]

After the2018 general elections, for the Serb member of the Presidency, Dodik received a record number of votes, i.e. 368,210 votes or 53.88%, while candidate Alliance for Victory Mladen Ivanić received 292,065 or 42.74%. In the People’s Assembly of Republika Srpska, SNSD remained the strongest political entity with 218,201 (31.87%) votes and 28 seats.

Ideology

[edit]

Reflecting a trend in Eastern Europe forcentre-left parties, it has been characterized as asocial-democratic party with left-leaning views on fiscal issues,[27][28] while having more conservative views on social issues.[29][30] Since the late 2000s, the party has gradually abandoned itsreformist ideology andconfederalism[31] forRussophilia[32][4] and a more aggressive advocacy ofSerbian nationalism andseparatism, threatening aproposed secession of Republika Srpska from the rest ofBosnia and Herzegovina numerous times.[13][14][33][16] This has also led to the party being expelled from theSocialist International in 2012 for continuing to "espouse a nationalist and extremist" line.[34]

List of presidents

[edit]
#Name
(Born–Died)
PortraitTerm of Office
1Milorad Dodik
(b. 1959)
10 March 1996present

Electoral results

[edit]

Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina

[edit]
Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina
YearLeader#Popular vote%HoRSeat changeHoPSeat changeGovernment
1996[a]Milorad Dodik5th136,0775.67
1 / 42
New
0 / 15
NewOpposition
1998[b]Increase 2nd214,71612.44
1 / 42
Steady
1 / 15
Increase 1Coalition
2000Decrease 7th75,8215.09
1 / 42
Steady
1 / 15
SteadyOpposition
2002Increase 5th120,3769.80
3 / 42
Increase 2
0 / 15
Decrease 1Opposition
2006Increase 1st269,46819.08
7 / 42
Increase 4
3 / 15
Increase 3Coalition
2010Decrease 2nd277,81916.92
8 / 42
Increase 1
2 / 15
Decrease 1Coalition
2014Steady 2nd255,02415.64
6 / 42
Decrease 2
2 / 15
SteadyOpposition
2018Steady 2nd265,59316.03
6 / 42
Steady
4 / 15
Increase 2Coalition
2022Steady 2nd259,52116.34
6 / 42
Steady
3 / 15
Decrease 1Coalition

National Assembly of Republika Srpska

[edit]
National Assembly of Republika Srpska
YearLeader#Popular vote%# of seatsSeat changeCoalitionGovernment
1996Milorad Dodik3rd125,37211.53%
1 / 83
NewNSSMOpposition
1998Decrease 6th53,8027.29%
6 / 83
Increase 5Coalition
2000Increase 2nd81,46713.00%
11 / 83
Increase 5Opposition
2002Steady 2nd111,22621.79%
19 / 83
Increase 8Opposition
2006Increase 1st244,25143.31%
41 / 83
Increase 22Coalition
2010Steady 1st240,72738.00%
37 / 83
Decrease 4Coalition
2014Steady 1st213,66532.28%
29 / 83
Decrease 8Coalition
2018Steady 1st218,20131.87%
28 / 83
Decrease 1Coalition
2022Steady 1st221,55434.63%
29 / 83
Increase 1Coalition

Presidential elections

[edit]
Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Election year#CandidateVotes%NoteElected?
1998Steady 1stŽivko Radišić359,93751.3%SupportYes
2002Decrease 2ndNebojša Radmanović101,11919.9%No
2006Increase 1stNebojša Radmanović287,67553.3%Yes
2010Steady 1stNebojša Radmanović295,62948.9%Yes
2014Decrease 2ndŽeljka Cvijanović310,65847.5%No
2018Increase 1stMilorad Dodik368,21053.9%Yes
2022Steady 1stŽeljka Cvijanović327,72051.6%Yes
President of Republika Srpska
Election year#CandidateVotes%Elected?
2000Steady 2ndMilorad Dodik161,94225.7%No
2002Steady 2ndMilan Jelić112,61222.1%No
2006Increase 1stMilan Jelić271,02248.87%Yes
2007Steady 1stRajko Kuzmanović169,86341.33%Yes
2010Steady 1stMilorad Dodik319,61850.52%Yes
2014Steady 1stMilorad Dodik303,49645.39%Yes
2018Steady 1stŽeljka Cvijanović319,69947.04%Yes
2022Steady 1stMilorad Dodik300,18047.06%Yes
2025–26Steady 1stSiniša Karan224,38450.54%Yes

Positions held

[edit]

Major positions held by Alliance of Independent Social Democrats members:

Member of the Presidency of Bosnia and HerzegovinaYears
Nebojša Radmanović2006–2014
Milorad Dodik2018–2022
Željka Cvijanović2022–
Chairman of the Council of Ministers
of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Years
Nikola Špirić2007–2012
Zoran Tegeltija2019–2023
President of Republika SrpskaYears
Milan Jelić2006–2007
Rajko Kuzmanović2007–2010
Milorad Dodik2010–2018
2022–2025
Željka Cvijanović2018–2022
Prime Minister of Republika SrpskaYears
Milorad Dodik1998–2001
2006–2010
Aleksandar Džombić2010–2013
Željka Cvijanović2013–2018
Radovan Višković2018–2025
Savo Minić2025–
Speaker of the National Assembly of Republika SrpskaYears
Igor Radojičić2006–2014

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Run as part of thePeople's Alliance for Free Peace.
  2. ^Run in coalition withSNS andSP.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Popadić, Slobodan (5 March 2019)."SNSD slavi 23. rođendan, Dodik: Republika Srpska je epicentar našeg djelovanja".Srpskainfo (in Serbian). Retrieved30 July 2020.
  2. ^abcdefghŠedo 2013, p. 94.
  3. ^"Dodik claims British person runs office in Sarajevo to prevent Russian influence". N1. 23 April 2019.
  4. ^abSito-Sucic, Maja Zuvela, Daria (8 October 2018)."Nationalists win in Bosnia, including Serb who opposes 'impossible state'".Reuters.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^Political Parties in Bosnia and Herzegovina (2025), Europe Elects
  6. ^
  7. ^
  8. ^"Bosnia and Herzegovina". Europe Elects.
  9. ^Kubát, Michal; Mejstřík, Martin (June 2020).Populist Parties in Contemporary Europe(PDF). Democratic Efficacy and the Varieties of Populism in Europe. p. 12.Its populism is focused on nativist ethnic identity rather than economic issues (its socioeconomic program is slightly leftist).
  10. ^Karić, Mirsad; Aydin, Sejma."Urban and Rural Voting Tendency: Case of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2014 Parliamentary Elections".Balkan Journal of Social Sciences.19 (10): 5.ISSN 2149-4622.Alliance of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD) - RS - Left|"Bosnia y Herzegovina: Las elecciones locales dejan pocos cambios en las alcaldías del país".El Electoral (in Spanish). 8 October 2024.De acuerdo con los resultados oficiales de la Comisión Electoral de Central de BiH, la Alianza de Socialdemócratas Independientes (SNSD), un partido de izquierda conservadora y ultranacionalista serbio, seguirá siendo el partido con un mayor número de alcaldías, al situarse con 47.
  11. ^Ferreira, Ana Rita; Rosas, João Cardoso (8 January 2014).Left and Right: The Great Dichotomy Revisited. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.ISBN 978-1-4438-5570-9.
  12. ^Hadžić, Faruk (2024)."Latin America, the Middle East & North Africa, and Europe: Present Inclusionary and Exclusionary Forms of Rightist and Leftist Populism".European Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies.9 (1): 63.ISSN 2414-8385.The Alliance of Independent Social Democrats (Savez nezavisnih socijaldemokrata; SNSD) is the centre left-wing party but simultaneously extremely radical right-wing.
  13. ^ab"Defying Ban, Republika Srpska Proceeds With 'Statehood Day'".Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 9 January 2018.
  14. ^ab"U.S. imposes sanctions on Bosnian Serb nationalist leader Dodik".U.S. 17 January 2017 – via www.reuters.com.
  15. ^"The 2016 Local Elections in Bosnia: a Win for the Major Ethno-nationalist Parties - Bosnia". Archived fromthe original on 14 April 2019. Retrieved12 January 2018.
  16. ^ab"The Political System of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Institutions – Actors – Processes"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 15 December 2017. Retrieved12 January 2018.
  17. ^"SNSD suspended from the Socialist International" (in Croatian). 2 July 2011. Archived fromthe original on 4 July 2011. Retrieved9 September 2012.
  18. ^"Member Parties of the Socialist International". Retrieved9 September 2012.
  19. ^abcdefghi"Istorija Stranke".snsd.org. 16 May 2012.
  20. ^Šedo 2013, p. 88.
  21. ^"Moderate Elected Prime Minister of Bosnian Serbs".Los Angeles Times. Reuters. 18 January 1998.
  22. ^Šedo 2013, p. 89.
  23. ^"Opšti izbori 2010". Archived fromthe original on 17 May 2013. Retrieved24 October 2022., Kanton 10.
  24. ^Arslanagic, Sabina (27 October 2010)."Bosnia Ballot Recount Over, No Fraud Found".Balkan Insight.
  25. ^"PREDSJEDNISTVO BOSNE I HERCEGOVINE".izbori.ba.
  26. ^Jukic, Elvira M. (26 November 2014)."Republika Srpska Leader Prepares to Name PM".Balkan Insight.
  27. ^Nordsieck, Wolfram (2018)."Bosnia-Herzegovina".Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved11 October 2018.
  28. ^Nardelli, Alberto; Dzidic, Denis; Jukic, Elvira (8 October 2014)."Bosnia and Herzegovina: the world's most complicated system of government?".The Guardian.
  29. ^Rosas, João Cardoso; Ferreira, Ana Rita (8 January 2014).Left and Right: The Great Dichotomy Revisited. Cambridge Scholars.ISBN 9781443855709.
  30. ^Passarelli, Gianluca (January 2018).The Presidentialisation of Political Parties in the Western Balkans. Springer.ISBN 9783319973524.
  31. ^'Za sve bi najbolja bila konfederacija Herceg Bosne, Republike Srpske i Bosne'. Večernji list, 14. veljače 2014. Pristupljeno 26. ožujka 2014.
  32. ^"Brit runs office for preventing Russia's influence in Bosnia".
  33. ^"The 2016 Local Elections in Bosnia: a Win for the Major Ethno-nationalist Parties - Bosnia". Archived fromthe original on 14 April 2019. Retrieved12 January 2018.
  34. ^Banović, Damir; Gavrić, Saša; Barreiro Mariño, Mariña (2020).The Political System of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Institutions – Actors – Processes. Springer. pp. 85–86.ISBN 978-3-03054-387-7.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Šedo, Jakub (2013). "The party system of Bosnia and Herzegovina". In Stojarová, Věra; Emerson, Peter (eds.).Party Politics in the Western Balkans. London-New York: Routledge.ISBN 9781135235857.

External links

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