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1989 Serbian general election

General elections were held in Serbia, a constituent federal unit of SFR Yugoslavia, on 12 November 1989 to elect the president of the presidency of the Socialist Republic of Serbia and delegates of the Assembly of SR Serbia. Voting for delegates also took place on 10 and 30 November 1989. In addition to the general elections, local elections were held simultaneously. These were the first direct elections conducted after the adoption of the 1974 Yugoslav Constitution and the delegate electoral system, and the last elections conducted under a one-party system.

1989 Serbian general election

Presidential election
12 November 1989 (1989-11-12) 1990 →
Turnout83.55%
 
Candidate Slobodan Milošević Mihalj Kertes Zoran Pjanić
Party SKS SKS SKS
Popular vote 4,452,312 480,924 404,853
Percentage 80.36% 8.68% 7.31%

Parliamentary election
← 1986 10, 12 and 30 November 1989 1990 →

All 340 seats in the Assembly of SR Serbia
171 seats needed for a majority
Turnout
82.35%
Party Leader Seats +/–
SKS Bogdan Trifunović 303 −20
Independents 37 +20
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

The election was preceded by the rise of Slobodan Milošević, who after being elected president of the presidency of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Serbia (SKS) in 1986, ousted his mentor Ivan Stambolić and Stambolić's allies from key positions in 1987. Milošević started the anti-bureaucratic revolution and began amending the constitution of Serbia in 1988. After Milošević was appointed to the position of the president of the presidency of SR Serbia in May 1989, presidential and parliamentary elections were announced for November 1989.

Milošević, Mihalj Kertes, Zoran Pjanić, and Miroslav Đorđević were the candidates in the presidential election; Milošević ended up winning the election in a landslide. SKS won 303 seats, a net loss of 20 seats in comparison with the 1986 election, and 37 individuals who were not members of SKS won the rest of the seats in the Assembly. The League of Communists of Yugoslavia ceased to exist in January 1990, and after a referendum in July 1990, Serbia adopted a new constitution that implemented a multi-party system and reduced powers of its autonomous provinces, Kosovo and Vojvodina. The first multi-party elections were then held in December 1990.

Background edit

Post-World War II edit

After World War II, the Communist Party consolidated power in Yugoslavia, transforming the country into a socialist state.[1][2] Each constituent republic had its own branch of the Communist party, with Serbia having the Communist Party of Serbia.[3] The federal Communist party renamed itself as the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (SKJ) at its 6th Congress in 1952.[4][5] Its branches did the same; the Communist Party of Serbia became the League of Communists of Serbia (SKS).[6][7] Josip Broz Tito was the president of SKJ until his death in 1980.[8]

After Tito's death, Yugoslavia was faced with issues related to the economy, constitutional problems, and a potential rise in ethnic nationalism.[9] Yugoslavia initially implemented austerity measures to reduce its debt.[10] A swift increase of debt, inflation, and unemployment was saw in the 1980s instead.[11] According to publicist Zlatoje Martinov, the republics got "stronger and became de facto states with their own armed forces" (sve više jačaju i predstavljaju faktičke države sa sopstvenim oružanim snagama) because of the crises.[12]: 9  Martinov also said that the gradual process of the dissolution of Yugoslavia was underway.[12]: 10  Following the 1986 parliamentary election, Desimir Jevtić was elected prime minister of Serbia.[13]

Rise of Slobodan Milošević edit

 
Slobodan Milošević (left) rose to power after removing Ivan Stambolić (right) and his allies from key positions in 1987

Ivan Stambolić, the president of the City Committee of the League of Communists of Belgrade, was elected president of the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS in 1984.[14][15] Considered a liberal and reformist within SKS, Stambolić was the mentor of Slobodan Milošević, his colleague from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law.[14][15][16] After becoming the president of the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS in 1984, Stambolić appointed Milošević as his successor to his previous role, despite opposition from older Communist officials.[14] Milošević then began forming a faction of officials that were loyal to him.[15]

Prior to the 1986 parliamentary election, Stambolić announced that he would step down from his position as the head of SKS.[17]: 105  Despite receiving support from 84 municipal boards of SKS, Milošević was still met with strong opposition inside the party.[17]: 105, 108  There were proposals to have several candidates in the leadership election, although, the presidency voted 12–8 to propose Milošević as the sole candidate for the president of the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS.[17]: 106, 110  Milošević was successfully elected president of SKS in May 1986, while Stambolić also began serving as president of Serbia, after being elected by the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS.[15][17]: 105, 120  Dragiša Pavlović, a liberal and Stambolić's ally, also became the president of the City Committee of the League of Communists of Belgrade.[15][17]: 118 

Milošević took a populist turn in April 1987.[18][19] He began portraying himself as a supporter of Kosovo Serbs, and during one visit to Kosovo, he said to Serbs that "no one will dare to beat you" (ne sme niko da vas bije).[15][18][20] During the same period, he became more critical of Stambolić and Pavlović, particularly due to their moderate stance on Kosovo.[16][21] Milošević called a session of the Central Committee of SKS to be held in September 1987.[22] At the session, Stambolić tried to reconcile Pavlović and Milošević, but Milošević instead criticised Stambolić and Pavlović.[15][23] Pavlović and Stambolić's other allies were then dismissed from their positions.[22] Some political scientists have characterised the session as a coup d'état.[24]: 35  Stambolić was isolated after the session and was removed from the position of the president of Serbia in December 1987.[15][24] He then retired from politics.[14][22]

Beginning in 1988, protests, dubbed the anti-bureaucratic revolution, began in Serbia and Montenegro in support of Milošević's centralisation programme.[24]: 41 [25] Although Milošević denied that he was directly involved in the protests, he actually had direct contact with the organisers.[25] In Montenegro, the leadership was forced to resign. It was replaced by the pro-Milošević faction, led by Momir Bulatović.[25] This soon followed in Vojvodina and Kosovo.[25][26] In Vojvodina, Mihalj Kertes particularly became a prominent figure due to his statement: "How can you Serbs be afraid of Serbia, when I, a Hungarian, am not afraid of Serbia?".[27] The Socialist Alliance of Working People of Serbia (SSRNS), an popular front organisation subordinate to SKS,[28][29] proposed Milošević to the position of the president of the presidency of the Socialist Republic of Serbia and was successfully appointed on 8 May 1989.[12]: 15 [30][31]

Constitutional changes edit

The aftermath of the 1988–1989 anti-bureaucratic revolution saw the amendments of the 1974 Yugoslav Constitution.[32]: 186  As part of the 1974 constitution, Kosovo was granted full autonomy and was given equal voting status like other six constituent republics.[33] Following the protests in March 1989, Milošević proposed amendments that were soon accepted by the Assembly of SAP Kosovo and Assembly of SR Serbia.[33] The amendment revoked the powers that autonomous provinces Kosovo and Vojvodina received in the 1974 constitution.[32]: 186 [33][34]

Electoral system edit

At the time of the 1989 elections, Serbia's electoral system was in accordance with the 1974 constitution.[35] Instead of directly electing members of the Assembly, citizens voted for the compositions of delegation bodies. Members of these delegation bodies then elected delegates that served in the Assembly of SR Serbia. The voting system was complex; it combined elements of a direct, indirect, and the first-past-the-post voting majoritarian system.[36]: 24 [37]: 63  Those who were 15 or older had the right to vote, and those who served in the army at the time of the elections were able to vote at their military stations.[38]: 69, 72  Invalid ballots were introduced with the 1989 elections; ballots that were blank or ballots which could not be determined who was voted for would be considered invalid.[38]: 72 

The Assembly was divided into three councils.[37]: 73–74  The Council of Associated Labour had 160 delegates, while the Council of Municipalities and Socio-Political Council each had 90 delegates. The delegates then elected members of the Presidency of the Socialist Republic of Serbia, the Council of the Republic, and a member of the Presidency of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.[35] At the time of the 1989 elections, Serbia was still a one-party state but the 1989 elections were the first direct elections to be held since 1974.[39]: 69 [40][41]

The parliamentary election was conducted on three separate days: 10, 12 and 30 November 1989.[36]: 27  Local elections were conducted on the same days as the parliamentary elections.[36]: 27  The presidential election was only held on 12 November.[12]: 15  Polling stations were opened from 07:00 (UTC+01:00) to 19:00.[38]: 71 

Political parties edit

The table below lists political parties elected in the Assembly of SR Serbia after the 1986 parliamentary election.[42]: 33  In the Council of Associated Labour, there were 148 SKS delegates; in the Council of Municipalities, there were 88 SKS delegates, and in the Socio-Political Council, there were 87 SKS delegates.[42]: 33  Most of the delegates were 50 years old or younger.[42]: 33 

Name Leader 1986 result
Seats
League of Communists of Serbia Ivan Stambolić
323 / 340
Independents
17 / 340

Conduct edit

Following Milošević's appointment to the position of the president of the presidency of SR Serbia, elections were called to dismiss any potential criticism on whether Milošević's appointment was "the wish of the people" (želja čitavog naroda).[12]: 15  The presidential election thus served as a referendum on whether Milošević should retain his position as the president of the presidency.[12]: 15 [38]: 3  SKS stated that these "elections should show that we believe in the policies of our leadership" (izbori treba da pokažu da verujemo u politiku svog rukovodstva).[12]: 15  At the time of the election, Bogdan Trifunović was the president of the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS.[43] As part of the pre-election campaign, over 10,000 delegation body conferences were organised in Serbia.[38]: 71  There were 19,478 delegation bodies that had 346,518 members in total.[36]: 33 

Presidential candidates edit

At a SSRNS session on 1 November 1989, Milošević was officially proposed as a presidential candidate.[38]: 68  So the presidential election would be perceived as democratic, multiple candidates were proposed for the election by SSRNS.[12]: 15  However, no candidate initially wanted to risk running against Milošević.[12]: 15  SSRNS then proposed final four candidates, these being Milošević, Kertes, and professors Zoran Pjanić and Miroslav Đorđević.[12]: 15 [44]

Results edit

According to a Politika report from November 1989, 14,855 polling stations were opened during the elections.[38]: 71 [40] Results of the elections were announced on 20 November, eight days after the election was held.[12]: 19 

Presidential edit

Beginning on 13 November, Radio-Television Belgrade and Politika reported turnouts and results.[12]: 16  It was reported that in Kuršumlija that 99 percent of voters voted for Milošević, and that in some villages of the municipality of Kraljevo, Milošević won all votes.[12]: 16  Similar results were reported in Kačanik, while in Vučitrn, Kertes won the most votes.[12]: 17  In the Sandžak region, Milošević won most votes.[12]: 17–18  The turnout was later reported to be at 83 percent and that Milošević won 80 percent of all votes cast.[12]: 19  Milošević won most of his votes in Central Serbia, followed by Vojvodina, and then Kosovo, where he only won 25 percent of popular vote.[36]: 80  In Belgrade, Milošević received 93 percent of the popular vote. Pjanić placed second with 4 percent, Kertes third with 3.3 percent, and Đorđević fourth with 2.7 percent.[36]: 79–80  Turnout in Belgrade was 80.3 percent.[36]: 80 

CandidatePartyVotes%
Slobodan MiloševićLeague of Communists of Serbia4,452,31280.36
Mihalj KertesLeague of Communists of Serbia480,9248.68
Zoran PjanićLeague of Communists of Serbia404,8537.31
Miroslav ĐorđevićLeague of Communists of Serbia202,6273.66
Total5,540,716100.00
Total votes5,540,716
Registered voters/turnout6,631,83983.55
Source: Republic Electoral Commission[12]: 19 

Parliamentary edit

For the parliamentary elections, there were 6,640,675 registered citizens that had the right to vote in total.[36]: 34  82 percent of the registered voters exercised their right to vote in the election.[36]: 34  In the parliamentary election, SKS won 303 seats in the Assembly of SR Serbia, a decrease of 20 seats in comparison with the 1986 parliamentary election.[45]: 29  37 of those who were not affiliated with SKS were elected in the election.[45]: 29  In the Council of Associated Labour, 134 SKS delegates were elected, in the Council of Municipalities, 84 SKS delegates were elected, and in the Socio-Political Council, 85 SKS delegates were elected.[45]: 29 

 
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
League of Communists of Serbia303–20
Independents37+20
Total3400
Total votes5,468,717
Registered voters/turnout6,640,67582.35
Source: Republic Bureau of Statistics[36]: 34 [42]: 29 

Aftermath edit

Assembly leadership edit

The Assembly of SR Serbia was constituted on 5 December 1989. Zoran Sokolović was elected president of the Assembly while Vukašin Jokanović, Slobodan Janjić, and Đorđe Šćepančević were elected vice-presidents of the Assembly.[46] Stanko Radmilović was elected prime minister of Serbia,[47][48] while on 6 December, the Assembly of SR Serbia officially declared Milošević as the president of the presidency.[44] Radmilović was a Milošević loyalist.[49]

Dissolution of SKJ edit

 
League of Communists of Yugoslavia (logo shown) ceased to exist as the result of the 14th congress

Milošević proposed reforms of the Federal Assembly of Yugoslavia in 1989.[50]: 21  These proposals were opposed by the Slovene delegation, which favoured keeping the composition in accordance with the 1974 constitution.[50]: 22  Because of the dispute, the first and only extraordinary congress was organised for 1990.[50]: 22 [51] The 14th congress, held in Sava Centar, Belgrade, was eventually organised for 20–23 January 1990.[50]: 26  Presided by Milan Pančevski, the congress was attended by over 1,600 delegates of all six constituent republics and two autonomous provinces.[51]

The congress started with a polemic between Borut Pahor and Milomir Minić, and it continued with Milan Kučan saying that Slovenes reject Serbia's proposed centralisation policies.[50]: 26–27  Ciril Ribičič and the Slovene delegation expressed their disappointment with the first plenary session of the 14th congress.[50]: 27  The head of the Serbian delegation, Milošević, proposed to introduce a "one man–one vote" system but, this was also opposed by the Slovene delegation, which favoured the reconstruction of SKJ and Yugoslavia to a confederal system instead.[51] With the help of Kosovo, Vojvodina, Montenegro, and Yugoslav People's Army delegates, all proposals from the Slovene and Bosnian delegation were rejected while Serbia's proposals were accepted.[51][52]: 83–84 [53]

At the second plenary session, the Slovene delegation left the Congress, stating that they did not want to be responsible "for the agony of LC of Yugoslavia into which the current impositions of will and the bearers of those impositions are leading it" (ne žele biti suodgovorni za agoniju SK Jugoslavije u koju je vode sadašnja nametanja volje i nosioci tih nametanja).[50]: 28–29 [53] Despite Milošević wanting to continue the congress without the Slovene delegation, the Croatian delegation, led by Ivica Račan, objected this.[50]: 29 [53] The Croatian delegation, joined by the Macedonian and Bosnian and Herzegovinian delegations, left the congress soon after.[50]: 29 [52]: 84 [54] Pančevski adjourned the session to 3 am for 23 January; on 23 January, the rest of Serbia's proposal were accepted.[50]: 29  The third plenary session of the 14th congress never occurred, and SKJ ceased to exist.[50]: 29 [55]

1990 constitutional referendum edit

While Serbia was still a one-party state, a referendum was organised in July 1990 on whether to adopt a new constitution or to hold multi-party elections first.[56][57][58] A majority of voters voted in favour of adopting a new constitution despite Kosovo Albanians boycotting the referendum; the constitution was adopted in September 1990.[57][59][60] The first multi-party elections were held in December 1990.[61][62]

With the adoption of the 1990 constitution, the autonomous provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina were renamed to Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija and Autonomous Province of Vojvodina, respectively, while the Socialist Republic of Serbia was renamed to the Republic of Serbia.[63][60] The power of the provinces were greatly reduced.[64]: 170 [65] Serbia's electoral system was also changed; the delegate system was abolished, Assembly of SR Serbia was renamed to the National Assembly, and the number of seats was decreased to 250.[35][66] The president of the National Assembly was also the one who would schedule parliamentary and presidential elections.[35]

Serbia also became a multi-party state, meaning that under the Law on Political Organisations, political parties could be registered to take part in future elections.[67]: 9–10 [68] SKS merged with the Socialist Alliance of Working People of Yugoslavia to create the Socialist Party of Serbia, while opposition parties, like the Democratic Party, Serbian Renewal Movement, People's Radical Party, and People's Peasant Party also registered as political parties.[39]: xix–xx [67]: 11 [68][69]

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Further reading edit

  • Izbori 1989 [1989 elections] (in Serbian) (1 ed.). Belgrade: Republički zavod za statistiku. 1990. OCLC 442493467. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
  • Antonić, Slobodan (2022). Može biti samo jedan: povest predsedničkih izbora u Srbiji 1989–2022 (in Serbian) (1 ed.). Višegrad: Andrićev institut. ISBN 9789997621986. Retrieved 15 August 2023.

External links edit

  • Republic Bureau of Statistics
  • Database of Legal Regulations

1989, serbian, general, election, general, elections, were, held, serbia, constituent, federal, unit, yugoslavia, november, 1989, elect, president, presidency, socialist, republic, serbia, delegates, assembly, serbia, voting, delegates, also, took, place, nove. General elections were held in Serbia a constituent federal unit of SFR Yugoslavia on 12 November 1989 to elect the president of the presidency of the Socialist Republic of Serbia and delegates of the Assembly of SR Serbia Voting for delegates also took place on 10 and 30 November 1989 In addition to the general elections local elections were held simultaneously These were the first direct elections conducted after the adoption of the 1974 Yugoslav Constitution and the delegate electoral system and the last elections conducted under a one party system 1989 Serbian general electionPresidential election12 November 1989 1989 11 12 1990 Turnout83 55 Candidate Slobodan Milosevic Mihalj Kertes Zoran PjanicParty SKS SKS SKSPopular vote 4 452 312 480 924 404 853Percentage 80 36 8 68 7 31 President of the Presidency before electionSlobodan MilosevicSKS Elected President of the Presidency Slobodan MilosevicSKSParliamentary election 1986 10 12 and 30 November 1989 1990 All 340 seats in the Assembly of SR Serbia171 seats needed for a majorityTurnout82 35 Party Leader Seats SKS Bogdan Trifunovic 303 20Independents 37 20This lists parties that won seats See the complete results below Prime Minister before Prime Minister afterDesimir JevticSKS Stanko RadmilovicSKSThe election was preceded by the rise of Slobodan Milosevic who after being elected president of the presidency of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Serbia SKS in 1986 ousted his mentor Ivan Stambolic and Stambolic s allies from key positions in 1987 Milosevic started the anti bureaucratic revolution and began amending the constitution of Serbia in 1988 After Milosevic was appointed to the position of the president of the presidency of SR Serbia in May 1989 presidential and parliamentary elections were announced for November 1989 Milosevic Mihalj Kertes Zoran Pjanic and Miroslav Đorđevic were the candidates in the presidential election Milosevic ended up winning the election in a landslide SKS won 303 seats a net loss of 20 seats in comparison with the 1986 election and 37 individuals who were not members of SKS won the rest of the seats in the Assembly The League of Communists of Yugoslavia ceased to exist in January 1990 and after a referendum in July 1990 Serbia adopted a new constitution that implemented a multi party system and reduced powers of its autonomous provinces Kosovo and Vojvodina The first multi party elections were then held in December 1990 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Post World War II 1 2 Rise of Slobodan Milosevic 1 3 Constitutional changes 2 Electoral system 2 1 Political parties 3 Conduct 3 1 Presidential candidates 4 Results 4 1 Presidential 4 2 Parliamentary 5 Aftermath 5 1 Assembly leadership 5 2 Dissolution of SKJ 5 3 1990 constitutional referendum 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editPost World War II edit After World War II the Communist Party consolidated power in Yugoslavia transforming the country into a socialist state 1 2 Each constituent republic had its own branch of the Communist party with Serbia having the Communist Party of Serbia 3 The federal Communist party renamed itself as the League of Communists of Yugoslavia SKJ at its 6th Congress in 1952 4 5 Its branches did the same the Communist Party of Serbia became the League of Communists of Serbia SKS 6 7 Josip Broz Tito was the president of SKJ until his death in 1980 8 After Tito s death Yugoslavia was faced with issues related to the economy constitutional problems and a potential rise in ethnic nationalism 9 Yugoslavia initially implemented austerity measures to reduce its debt 10 A swift increase of debt inflation and unemployment was saw in the 1980s instead 11 According to publicist Zlatoje Martinov the republics got stronger and became de facto states with their own armed forces sve vise jacaju i predstavljaju fakticke drzave sa sopstvenim oruzanim snagama because of the crises 12 9 Martinov also said that the gradual process of the dissolution of Yugoslavia was underway 12 10 Following the 1986 parliamentary election Desimir Jevtic was elected prime minister of Serbia 13 Rise of Slobodan Milosevic edit Further information 8th Session of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Serbia and Anti bureaucratic revolution nbsp Slobodan Milosevic left rose to power after removing Ivan Stambolic right and his allies from key positions in 1987Ivan Stambolic the president of the City Committee of the League of Communists of Belgrade was elected president of the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS in 1984 14 15 Considered a liberal and reformist within SKS Stambolic was the mentor of Slobodan Milosevic his colleague from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law 14 15 16 After becoming the president of the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS in 1984 Stambolic appointed Milosevic as his successor to his previous role despite opposition from older Communist officials 14 Milosevic then began forming a faction of officials that were loyal to him 15 Prior to the 1986 parliamentary election Stambolic announced that he would step down from his position as the head of SKS 17 105 Despite receiving support from 84 municipal boards of SKS Milosevic was still met with strong opposition inside the party 17 105 108 There were proposals to have several candidates in the leadership election although the presidency voted 12 8 to propose Milosevic as the sole candidate for the president of the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS 17 106 110 Milosevic was successfully elected president of SKS in May 1986 while Stambolic also began serving as president of Serbia after being elected by the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS 15 17 105 120 Dragisa Pavlovic a liberal and Stambolic s ally also became the president of the City Committee of the League of Communists of Belgrade 15 17 118 Milosevic took a populist turn in April 1987 18 19 He began portraying himself as a supporter of Kosovo Serbs and during one visit to Kosovo he said to Serbs that no one will dare to beat you ne sme niko da vas bije 15 18 20 During the same period he became more critical of Stambolic and Pavlovic particularly due to their moderate stance on Kosovo 16 21 Milosevic called a session of the Central Committee of SKS to be held in September 1987 22 At the session Stambolic tried to reconcile Pavlovic and Milosevic but Milosevic instead criticised Stambolic and Pavlovic 15 23 Pavlovic and Stambolic s other allies were then dismissed from their positions 22 Some political scientists have characterised the session as a coup d etat 24 35 Stambolic was isolated after the session and was removed from the position of the president of Serbia in December 1987 15 24 He then retired from politics 14 22 Beginning in 1988 protests dubbed the anti bureaucratic revolution began in Serbia and Montenegro in support of Milosevic s centralisation programme 24 41 25 Although Milosevic denied that he was directly involved in the protests he actually had direct contact with the organisers 25 In Montenegro the leadership was forced to resign It was replaced by the pro Milosevic faction led by Momir Bulatovic 25 This soon followed in Vojvodina and Kosovo 25 26 In Vojvodina Mihalj Kertes particularly became a prominent figure due to his statement How can you Serbs be afraid of Serbia when I a Hungarian am not afraid of Serbia 27 The Socialist Alliance of Working People of Serbia SSRNS an popular front organisation subordinate to SKS 28 29 proposed Milosevic to the position of the president of the presidency of the Socialist Republic of Serbia and was successfully appointed on 8 May 1989 12 15 30 31 Constitutional changes edit The aftermath of the 1988 1989 anti bureaucratic revolution saw the amendments of the 1974 Yugoslav Constitution 32 186 As part of the 1974 constitution Kosovo was granted full autonomy and was given equal voting status like other six constituent republics 33 Following the protests in March 1989 Milosevic proposed amendments that were soon accepted by the Assembly of SAP Kosovo and Assembly of SR Serbia 33 The amendment revoked the powers that autonomous provinces Kosovo and Vojvodina received in the 1974 constitution 32 186 33 34 Electoral system editAt the time of the 1989 elections Serbia s electoral system was in accordance with the 1974 constitution 35 Instead of directly electing members of the Assembly citizens voted for the compositions of delegation bodies Members of these delegation bodies then elected delegates that served in the Assembly of SR Serbia The voting system was complex it combined elements of a direct indirect and the first past the post voting majoritarian system 36 24 37 63 Those who were 15 or older had the right to vote and those who served in the army at the time of the elections were able to vote at their military stations 38 69 72 Invalid ballots were introduced with the 1989 elections ballots that were blank or ballots which could not be determined who was voted for would be considered invalid 38 72 The Assembly was divided into three councils 37 73 74 The Council of Associated Labour had 160 delegates while the Council of Municipalities and Socio Political Council each had 90 delegates The delegates then elected members of the Presidency of the Socialist Republic of Serbia the Council of the Republic and a member of the Presidency of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 35 At the time of the 1989 elections Serbia was still a one party state but the 1989 elections were the first direct elections to be held since 1974 39 69 40 41 The parliamentary election was conducted on three separate days 10 12 and 30 November 1989 36 27 Local elections were conducted on the same days as the parliamentary elections 36 27 The presidential election was only held on 12 November 12 15 Polling stations were opened from 07 00 UTC 01 00 to 19 00 38 71 Political parties edit The table below lists political parties elected in the Assembly of SR Serbia after the 1986 parliamentary election 42 33 In the Council of Associated Labour there were 148 SKS delegates in the Council of Municipalities there were 88 SKS delegates and in the Socio Political Council there were 87 SKS delegates 42 33 Most of the delegates were 50 years old or younger 42 33 Name Leader 1986 resultSeatsLeague of Communists of Serbia Ivan Stambolic 323 340Independents 17 340Conduct editFollowing Milosevic s appointment to the position of the president of the presidency of SR Serbia elections were called to dismiss any potential criticism on whether Milosevic s appointment was the wish of the people zelja citavog naroda 12 15 The presidential election thus served as a referendum on whether Milosevic should retain his position as the president of the presidency 12 15 38 3 SKS stated that these elections should show that we believe in the policies of our leadership izbori treba da pokazu da verujemo u politiku svog rukovodstva 12 15 At the time of the election Bogdan Trifunovic was the president of the presidency of the Central Committee of SKS 43 As part of the pre election campaign over 10 000 delegation body conferences were organised in Serbia 38 71 There were 19 478 delegation bodies that had 346 518 members in total 36 33 Presidential candidates edit At a SSRNS session on 1 November 1989 Milosevic was officially proposed as a presidential candidate 38 68 So the presidential election would be perceived as democratic multiple candidates were proposed for the election by SSRNS 12 15 However no candidate initially wanted to risk running against Milosevic 12 15 SSRNS then proposed final four candidates these being Milosevic Kertes and professors Zoran Pjanic and Miroslav Đorđevic 12 15 44 Results editAccording to a Politika report from November 1989 14 855 polling stations were opened during the elections 38 71 40 Results of the elections were announced on 20 November eight days after the election was held 12 19 Presidential edit Beginning on 13 November Radio Television Belgrade and Politika reported turnouts and results 12 16 It was reported that in Kursumlija that 99 percent of voters voted for Milosevic and that in some villages of the municipality of Kraljevo Milosevic won all votes 12 16 Similar results were reported in Kacanik while in Vucitrn Kertes won the most votes 12 17 In the Sandzak region Milosevic won most votes 12 17 18 The turnout was later reported to be at 83 percent and that Milosevic won 80 percent of all votes cast 12 19 Milosevic won most of his votes in Central Serbia followed by Vojvodina and then Kosovo where he only won 25 percent of popular vote 36 80 In Belgrade Milosevic received 93 percent of the popular vote Pjanic placed second with 4 percent Kertes third with 3 3 percent and Đorđevic fourth with 2 7 percent 36 79 80 Turnout in Belgrade was 80 3 percent 36 80 CandidatePartyVotes Slobodan MilosevicLeague of Communists of Serbia4 452 31280 36Mihalj KertesLeague of Communists of Serbia480 9248 68Zoran PjanicLeague of Communists of Serbia404 8537 31Miroslav ĐorđevicLeague of Communists of Serbia202 6273 66Total5 540 716100 00Total votes5 540 716 Registered voters turnout6 631 83983 55Source Republic Electoral Commission 12 19 Parliamentary edit For the parliamentary elections there were 6 640 675 registered citizens that had the right to vote in total 36 34 82 percent of the registered voters exercised their right to vote in the election 36 34 In the parliamentary election SKS won 303 seats in the Assembly of SR Serbia a decrease of 20 seats in comparison with the 1986 parliamentary election 45 29 37 of those who were not affiliated with SKS were elected in the election 45 29 In the Council of Associated Labour 134 SKS delegates were elected in the Council of Municipalities 84 SKS delegates were elected and in the Socio Political Council 85 SKS delegates were elected 45 29 nbsp PartyVotes Seats League of Communists of Serbia303 20Independents37 20Total3400Total votes5 468 717 Registered voters turnout6 640 67582 35Source Republic Bureau of Statistics 36 34 42 29 Aftermath editAssembly leadership edit The Assembly of SR Serbia was constituted on 5 December 1989 Zoran Sokolovic was elected president of the Assembly while Vukasin Jokanovic Slobodan Janjic and Đorđe Scepancevic were elected vice presidents of the Assembly 46 Stanko Radmilovic was elected prime minister of Serbia 47 48 while on 6 December the Assembly of SR Serbia officially declared Milosevic as the president of the presidency 44 Radmilovic was a Milosevic loyalist 49 Dissolution of SKJ edit Further information 14th Congress of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia nbsp League of Communists of Yugoslavia logo shown ceased to exist as the result of the 14th congressMilosevic proposed reforms of the Federal Assembly of Yugoslavia in 1989 50 21 These proposals were opposed by the Slovene delegation which favoured keeping the composition in accordance with the 1974 constitution 50 22 Because of the dispute the first and only extraordinary congress was organised for 1990 50 22 51 The 14th congress held in Sava Centar Belgrade was eventually organised for 20 23 January 1990 50 26 Presided by Milan Pancevski the congress was attended by over 1 600 delegates of all six constituent republics and two autonomous provinces 51 The congress started with a polemic between Borut Pahor and Milomir Minic and it continued with Milan Kucan saying that Slovenes reject Serbia s proposed centralisation policies 50 26 27 Ciril Ribicic and the Slovene delegation expressed their disappointment with the first plenary session of the 14th congress 50 27 The head of the Serbian delegation Milosevic proposed to introduce a one man one vote system but this was also opposed by the Slovene delegation which favoured the reconstruction of SKJ and Yugoslavia to a confederal system instead 51 With the help of Kosovo Vojvodina Montenegro and Yugoslav People s Army delegates all proposals from the Slovene and Bosnian delegation were rejected while Serbia s proposals were accepted 51 52 83 84 53 At the second plenary session the Slovene delegation left the Congress stating that they did not want to be responsible for the agony of LC of Yugoslavia into which the current impositions of will and the bearers of those impositions are leading it ne zele biti suodgovorni za agoniju SK Jugoslavije u koju je vode sadasnja nametanja volje i nosioci tih nametanja 50 28 29 53 Despite Milosevic wanting to continue the congress without the Slovene delegation the Croatian delegation led by Ivica Racan objected this 50 29 53 The Croatian delegation joined by the Macedonian and Bosnian and Herzegovinian delegations left the congress soon after 50 29 52 84 54 Pancevski adjourned the session to 3 am for 23 January on 23 January the rest of Serbia s proposal were accepted 50 29 The third plenary session of the 14th congress never occurred and SKJ ceased to exist 50 29 55 1990 constitutional referendum edit Further information 1990 Serbian constitutional referendum While Serbia was still a one party state a referendum was organised in July 1990 on whether to adopt a new constitution or to hold multi party elections first 56 57 58 A majority of voters voted in favour of adopting a new constitution despite Kosovo Albanians boycotting the referendum the constitution was adopted in September 1990 57 59 60 The first multi party elections were held in December 1990 61 62 With the adoption of the 1990 constitution the autonomous provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina were renamed to Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija and Autonomous Province of Vojvodina respectively while the Socialist Republic of Serbia was renamed to the Republic of Serbia 63 60 The power of the provinces were greatly reduced 64 170 65 Serbia s electoral system was also changed the delegate system was abolished Assembly of SR Serbia was renamed to the National Assembly and the number of seats 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Serbian Belgrade Republic Bureau of Statistics December 1990 ISSN 0351 4064 Delegatska skupstina 1974 1990 Delegate Assembly 1974 1990 National Assembly of Serbia in Serbian Archived from the original on 30 November 2022 Retrieved 10 August 2023 Staar Richard Felix 1990 1990 Yearbook on International Communist Affairs California Hoover Institution on War Revolution and Peace p 449 ISBN 9780817989415 OCLC 22599369 Ekonomska politika Economic policy in Serbian Charlottesville Virginia Novinsko izdavacko graficko preduzece Borba 1993 p 13 Vujacic Veljko Marko 1995 Communism and Nationalism in Russia and Serbia Vol 2 p 388 OCLC 645773749 a b c d e f g h i j k Paukovic Davor 2008 Posljednji kongres Saveza komunista Jugoslavije uzroci tijek i posljedice raspada The last congress of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia causes course and consequences of the collapse Suvremene Teme 1 1 ISSN 1847 2397 Archived from the original on 20 May 2023 Retrieved 15 August 2023 a b c d Sest stvari koje treba da znate o 14 kongresu SKJ Six things you should know about the 14th SKJ Congress Radio Television of Serbia in Serbian 22 January 2020 Archived from the original on 14 August 2023 Retrieved 14 August 2023 a b Gagnon Valere Philip 2004 The Myth of Ethnic War Serbia and Croatia in the 1990s Ithaca New York Cornell University Press doi 10 7591 9780801468889 ISBN 9780801472916 OCLC 1024012168 a b c Tempest Rone 23 January 1990 Communists in Yugoslavia Split Into Factions Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 19 October 2020 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Aljovic Armin 20 January 2022 Posljednji kongres SKJ Prosle su 32 godine od pocetka raspada Jugoslavije The last congress of SKJ 32 years have passed since the beginning of the breakup of Yugoslavia Al Jazeera in Bosnian Archived from the original on 7 December 2022 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Colak Andrija 26 November 1990 Agonija SKJ The agony of SKJ Vreme in Serbian Archived from the original on 14 August 2023 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Grkovic Branislav 30 December 2021 Ko nas je do sada sta pitao na referendumima Who has asked us what so far at referendums Istinomer in Serbian Archived from the original on 14 August 2023 Retrieved 14 August 2023 a b Ignja Petar 22 October 1998 Odlucivanje Stranci na Kosovu bez referenduma Decision making Foreigners in Kosovo without a referendum Nin in Serbian ISSN 0027 6685 Archived from the original on 15 August 2023 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Gallgher Tom 2006 Outcast Europe The Balkans 1789 1989 From the Ottomans to Milosevic London Routledge p 269 ISBN 9780415270892 OCLC 838129328 Rekorder po broju referenduma Milosevic Milosevic holds the record for the number of referendums Danas in Serbian 1 December 2021 Archived from the original on 14 August 2023 Retrieved 14 August 2023 a b Zivanovic Maja 16 April 2021 Sve o izmenama Ustava u Srbiji All about changes to the Constitution in Serbia Radio Free Europe in Serbian Archived from the original on 27 November 2021 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Pfaff William 8 November 1990 Trouble in the Balkans The Baltimore Sun ProQuest 407084628 Archived from the original on 15 August 2023 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Odluka o raspisivanju izbora za narodne poslanike u Narodnu skupstinu Republike Srbije Decision on announcing elections for deputies to the National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia Sluzbeni glasnik Republike Srbije 1 30 28 September 1990 ISSN 1452 5151 Article 6 Section 1 of the Constitution of Serbia 1990 Tierney Stephen 2014 Constitutional Referendums The Theory and Practice of Republican Deliberation Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198713968 OCLC 865491258 Serbians Vote Communists Try to Keep Power Los Angeles Times 2 July 1990 ISSN 0458 3035 Archived from the original on 15 August 2023 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Article 74 Section 5 of the Constitution of Serbia 1990 a b Sotirovic Vladislav B 2010 The Multiparty Elections in Serbia in 1990 Politikos mokslu almanachas 6 ISSN 1822 9212 a b Dedeic Sinisa 9 December 2010 Pocetak visestranacja na cetiri M The beginning of multi partyism on four M Istinomer in Serbian Archived from the original on 14 August 2023 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Borrell John 6 August 1990 Yugoslavia The Old Demons Arise Time Archived from the original on 2 January 2023 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Further reading editIzbori 1989 1989 elections in Serbian 1 ed Belgrade Republicki zavod za statistiku 1990 OCLC 442493467 Retrieved 14 August 2023 Antonic Slobodan 2022 Moze biti samo jedan povest predsednickih izbora u Srbiji 1989 2022 in Serbian 1 ed Visegrad Andricev institut ISBN 9789997621986 Retrieved 15 August 2023 External links edit nbsp Serbia portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Socialism portalRepublic Bureau of Statistics Database of Legal Regulations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1989 Serbian general election amp oldid 1193944537, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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