Socialist Party of Serbia

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Socialist Party of Serbia
Социјалистичка Партија Србије
Socijalistička Partija Srbije
image:Spslogo.jpg
Leader Ivica Dačić
Founded 27 July 1990
Headquarters Belgrade, Serbia
Political ideology Democratic socialism[1],
Left-wing nationalism
International affiliation None
European affiliation None
Colour(s) Red, Blue, White
Website www.sps.org.yu
Also about
Serbian politics
Politics
List of political parties
Elections

The Socialist Party of Serbia (Serbian: Социјалистичка партија Србије, Socijalistička partija Srbije) is a political party in Serbia. It was founded on July 27, 1990, by Slobodan Milošević, as a merger of Milošević's League of Communists of Serbia (Serbian section of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia), and the Socialist Alliance of the Working People of Serbia (the Serbian branch of the Socialist Alliance of the Working People of Yugoslavia).[2] led by Radmila Anđelković.

The party won the first elections in Serbia with 194 out of 250 seats and 46.1% of the popular vote.[3] From 1992 it governed in coalition with other parties – initially with the Serbian Radical Party, and from 1993 with the New Democracy Party. They also contested elections in coalition with Yugoslav Left, a party led by Milošević's wife Mirjana Marković.

The party attempted to join Socialist International, and was nearly unanimously rejected, with only two parties voting in favour (PASOK of Greece and the French Socialist Party), while most of the others (over 160 parties from over 130 countries) voted against. British Labour Party was traditionally absent. According to information on SPS,[4] with this decision came a hard and unpleasant letter, in which it accused the SPS of ethnic nationalism, warmongering, and for people's suffering.

With the ousting of Milošević in 2000, the party became a part of the opposition. In the 2003 Serbian general elections, the party won 7.6% of the popular vote and 22 out of 250 seats in the National Assembly of Serbia. In 2004, however, its candidate in the presidential election, Ivica Dačić, placed fifth with 3.6% of the vote.

In 2007 parliamentary elections, the Socialist Party of Serbia won 16 seats with 227,580 or 5.64 percent of votes. It formed a sole club, with Ivica Dačić as president and Žarko Obradović as vice-president. It won 14 seats outright while a single seat was given to its new partner, the Movement of Veterans of Serbia and non-partisan Borka Vučić, who became the transitional speaker, also received a seat.

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[edit] Policies

Slobodan Milošević, party founder and leader from 1990 to 1997.
Slobodan Milošević, party founder and leader from 1990 to 1997.
Ivica Dacic, leader of the Socialist Party of Serbia.
Ivica Dacic, leader of the Socialist Party of Serbia.

The Socialist Party of Serbia upon its foundation, was the heir to the League of Communists of Serbia and more particularly the agenda of Serbian President Slobodan Milošević, who had come to power promising the strengthening of Serb influence in Yugoslavia by reducing the autonomy of the provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina within Serbia, and had demanded a one-member-one vote system for the League of Communists of Yugoslavia which would have given a numerical majority to the Serbs. This nationalist course was a major factor in the splintering of the Yugoslav Communist party, and caused the Serbian communist elite to take part in the creation of the Socialist Party of Serbia.

The party made economic reforms outside of Communist ideology such as recognizing all forms of property and intended a progression to a market economy while at the same time advocating some regulation for the purposes of "solidarity, equality, and social security".[5] In power however, the party enacted policies that were negative to workers rights, such as ending the Communists' worker participation programs, and in 1996, the party passed bills on employment and strikes which another left-wing party, the Syndicate Alliance of Yugoslavia criticized as being equivalent to Mussolini's Labour Charter.[6]

Officially the party endorsed the equality of all the Yugoslav peoples and ethnic minorities on the principle of full equality.[7] However the party's endorsement of a repressive strategy against Albanian separatism in Kosovo and accusations of warmongering have challenged the party's official commitment to equality and the authoritarian leadership of Milosevic has challenged the democratic nature of the party.

Milan Milutinović, leader from 1997 to 2002.
Milan Milutinović, leader from 1997 to 2002.

From 1990 to 1993, the party endorsed nationalist policy towards the retaking of Serb territories in Bosnia & Herzegovina and Croatia, as the SPS was in coalition with the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party.[8] Though, unlike the SRS, the SPS did not officially consider all Montenegrins and Macedonians as being Serbs and only endorsed reintegration of territories composed of self-proclaimed Serbs into Yugoslavia. Milošević responded to press questions of whether the Serbian government endorsed the Bosnian Serbs, by claiming that the Serbian government did not directly support the Srpska government or Serb military forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina in their war but claimed that Serbs had the right to self-determination. Information provided by SPS member and government official Borisav Jovic in the 1995 BBC Documentary "The Death of Yugoslavia" has indicated that this was not true, that Milošević endorsed the transfer of Bosnian Serb federal army forces to the Bosnian Serb Army in 1992 to wage war for Serb independence from the Bosniak-dominated government of Bosnia and Herzegovina. After 1993, the SPS broke away from coalition with the Radicals and officially opposed the Bosnian Serb government of Radovan Karadzic by passing economic sanctions against it, as Karadzic was opposing peace initiatives and the party officially criticized the discriminatory nationalism of Karadzic's regime.[9]

In 1995, Milosevic and the SPS endorsed peace in Bosnia which caused the U.S. to endorse Milosevic's presence as representative for the Bosnian Serbs for the signing of the Dayton Peace Accord. In the aftermath, the SPS lost many local elections in 1996 in which it refused to admit defeat, causing massive protests against Milosevic's government.[10] The party continued to falter and Milosevic resigned as Serbian President to run for Yugoslav President in 1997, which he won.

The SPS unlike the right-wing nationalist Serbian Radical Party, participated in negotiations along with a number of other Serbian political parties with ethnic Albanian politicians in Kosovo to attempt to resolve outstanding disputes between the ethnic Albanian population of Kosovo and the Serbian government in an attempt to stop the Kosovo War.[11] The SPS however was unwilling to grant the secession of any territory from Kosovo.

From 1998 onwards, the SPS returned to its more successful coalition with the Serbian Radical Party as Kosovo separatism was on the rise and once again adopted nationalism into its ideology.[12]

In reaction to the 2008 declaration of Kosovo independence, SPS leader Ivica Dacic, said he would call for a ban on all political parties and non-governmental organisations in Serbia which recognise Kosovo’s independence.[13]

[edit] Accusations of Illegal Activities

Under Milosevic's government critics have accused the SPS of utilizing organized crime to aide it, such as utilizing blackmail, endorsing assassination of political opponents (such as former Serbian President Ivan Stambolic), providing recruits for paramilitary forces during the Yugoslav Wars, and profiteering from illicit drug and oil trade.[14]

[edit] Relations to other parties

Until the final dissolution of a federal Yugoslav state in 2006, the Socialist Party of Serbia held close ties with the Yugoslav Left, a coalition of left-wing and communist factions led by Milosevic's wife. The SPS has held close ties with the various political parties led by Momir Bulatovic who had been installed as President of Montenegro with Milosevic's aide, the SPS supported the Democratic Party of Socialists of Montenegro until Bulatovic's ousting in 1998, Socialist People's Party of Montenegro under Bulatovic from 1998 until his ousting in 2000, and the last one to be led by Bulatovic is the People's Socialist Party of Montenegro. The SPS holds ties with a branch party in the Republic of Srpska in Bosnia & Herzegovina, the Socialist Party of Republika Srpska which was founded in 1993.[15]. After the Dayton Accord, this party became a major opponent to the regime of Radovan Karadzic.[16]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Bylaws of SPS, inside of the first paragraph they claim that they "belong to the democratic left" (in Serbian)
  2. ^ Yugoslavia The Old Demons Arise, TIME Magazine, August 06, 1990
  3. ^ Parties and Elections in Europe
  4. ^ Free Serbia – Other voices from Serbia – Politics
  5. ^ Bozóki, András; Ishiyama, John T. (2002). Communist Successor Parties of Central and Eastern Europe. M.E. Sharpe P. 206
  6. ^ Bozóki, András; Ishiyama, John T. P. 213
  7. ^ Bozóki, András; Ishiyama, John T. P. 206
  8. ^ Bozóki, András; Ishiyama, John T. P. 213
  9. ^ Bozóki, András; Ishiyama, John T. P. 213
  10. ^ Bozóki, András; Ishiyama, John T. P. 213
  11. ^ [1]
  12. ^ Bozóki, András; Ishiyama, John T. P. 213
  13. ^ What is at stake in the struggle for Serbia?, Bosnian Institute, February 26, 2008
  14. ^ Bozóki, András; Ishiyama, John T. P. 217-218
  15. ^ Day, Alan J.; East, Roger; Thomas, Richard. 2002. A Political and Economic Dictionary of Eastern Europe. Routledge. P. 544
  16. ^ Day, Alan J.; East, Roger; Thomas, Richard. P. 545


[edit] See also

[edit] External links