President of the Government of Serbia | |
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Председница Владе Србије Predsednica Vlade Srbije | |
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Government of Serbia | |
Style | Her Excellency |
Nominator | President of Serbia |
Appointer | National Assembly |
Term length | No term limit |
Inaugural holder | Mateja Nenadović |
Formation | 27 August 1805 |
Salary | €1,257 monthly |
Website | srbija |
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The prime minister of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic : премијерка Србије, romanized: premijerka Srbije; masculine: премијер/premijer), officially the president of the Government of the Republic of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic : председница Владе Републике Србије, romanized: predsednica Vlade Republike Srbije; masculine: председник/predsednik) is the principal executive minister of the Government of Serbia. [1] : 38 The prime minister directs the work of the government, and submits to the National Assembly the government's program, including a list of proposed ministers. The resignation of the prime minister results in the dismissal of the government.
The first officeholder was Matija Nenadović, who became prime minister on 27 August 1805. [2] The current prime minister, Ana Brnabić was nominated by the former prime minister and current president of the Republic, Aleksandar Vučić, and elected and appointed by the National Assembly on 29 June 2017. [3] Brnabić currently heads her third cabinet, which was formed on 26 October 2022. [4]
During the period of Revolutionary Serbia, the title of the principal executive minister was President of the Governing Council (Serbian Cyrillic : Председник правитељствујушчег совјета сербског, romanized: Predsednik praviteljstvujuščeg sovjeta serbskog; lit. 'President of the ruling Serbian Soviet'). [5] [6] [7] [8] Initially the Council had no ministers, just members, but in 1811 modern ministries were created. Government ceased to exist with the collapse of the First Serbian Uprising on 3 October 1813, however later continued in exile in Hotin (Russian Empire) from 1813 until 1814.
Government was restored on 21 November 1815 following the Second Serbian Uprising. Head of government was styled Prince's Representative (Књажевски представник / Knjaževski predstavnik). The style remained official until 1861, even after the establishing of constitutional government in 1835. Prior to that date, the office was of no major importance or influence and depended solely on the will of the Prince Miloš Obrenović.
From 1861 until 1903, the head of government was styled President of the Ministry (Председник министарства / Predsednik ministarstva).
From 1903 until the creation of the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes on 1 December 1918, head of government was styled President of the Council of Ministers (Председник Министарског савета / Predsednik Ministarskog saveta).
Under the communist regime after 1945, Serbia got a sort of separate KPJ-appointed government opposed to the German-installed one in September 1941. First, the 'head of government' was styled President of the Executive Council of the Supreme National Liberational Council until 7 March 1945. On that day, a ministry for Serbia was created within the government of Yugoslavia (as for all the other five republics), with Minister for Serbia being in charge of creating first one-party government of post-War Serbia, which took place on 9 April 1945. Governments were headed by President of the Government until 3 February 1953, President of the Executive Council until 15 January 1991 and again President of the Government since then, but the term Prime Minister is colloquially used (especially in the media) since the government of Dragutin Zelenović in 1991. In some later articles about the recent history of Serbia, term is retroactively applied to Stanko Radmilović, Desimir Jevtić and even back to Ivan Stambolić's government.
Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) | Term of office | Cabinet | Monarch (Reign) | Ref(s) | ||
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Took office | Left office | Time in office | |||||
![]() | Matija Nenadović (1777–1854) | 27 August 1805 | April 1807 | 1 year, 217 days | М. Nenadović | Đorđe Petrović ![]() (1804–1814) | [2] [9] [10] |
![]() | Mladen Milovanović (1760–1823) | April 1807 | 31 December 1810 | 3 years, 274 days | Milovanović I | [10] [11] : 70 | |
![]() | Jakov Nenadović (1765–1836) | 31 December 1810 | 11 January 1811 | 11 days | Ј. Nenadović | [11] : 70–74 [12] | |
![]() | Đorđe Petrović (1768–1817) | 11 January 1811 | 3 October 1813 | 2 years, 265 days | Petrović | [11] : 73–74 [13] [14] | |
![]() | Mladen Milovanović (1760–1823) | 3 October 1813 | 1814 | 1 year, 89 days | Milovanović II [lower-alpha 1] | [15] |
Conservative Party Liberal Party Serbian Progressive Party Independent
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) | Term of office | Party | Note | Head of State | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representatives of the Prince 1815–1861 | ||||||||
Grand Vožd (1815–17) Prince (1817–82) | ||||||||
5 | ![]() | Petar Nikolajević Moler Петар Николајевић Молер (1775–1816) | 21 November 1815 | 16 May 1816 | Independent | Miloš Obrenović ![]() (1815–1839) | ||
6 | ![]() | Jevrem Obrenović Јеврем Обреновић (1790–1856) ![]() | 1821 | 1826 | Independent | The youngest brother of Prince Miloš Obrenović. | ||
7 | ![]() | Miloje Todorović Милоје Тодоровић (1762–1832) | 1826 | 1826 | Independent | |||
8 | ![]() | Dimitrije Davidović Димитрије Давидовић (1789–1839) ![]() | 1826 | 1829 | Independent | |||
9 | ![]() | Koca Marković Коца Марковић (1795–1836) | 15 February 1835 | 28 March 1836 | Independent | |||
N/A | ![]() | Tenka Stefanović Стефан Стефановић Тенка (1797–1865) | 28 March 1836 | 26 February 1839 | Independent | Acting. | ||
10 | ![]() | Avram Petronijević Аврам Петронијевић (1791–1852) | 26 February 1839 | 7 April 1840 | Independent | First term. | ||
Mihailo Obrenović ![]() (1839–1842) | ||||||||
– | ![]() | Paun Janković Паун Јанковић (1808–1865) | 7 April 1840 | 15 May 1840 | Independent | Acting. | ||
11 | ![]() | Đorđe Protić Ђорђе Протић (1793–1857) | 15 May 1840 | 7 September 1842 | Independent | |||
(10) | ![]() | Avram Petronijević Аврам Петронијевић (1791–1852) | 7 September 1842 | 6 October 1843 | Independent | Second term. | ||
Alexander Karađorđević ![]() (1842–1858) | ||||||||
12 | ![]() | Aleksa Simić Алекса Симић (1800–1872) | 6 October 1843 | 11 October 1844 | Independent | First term. | ||
(10) | ![]() | Avram Petronijević Аврам Петронијевић (1791–1852) | 11 October 1844 | 22 April 1852 | Independent | Third term. Died in Constantinople while on official visit to the Ottoman Empire. | ||
13 | ![]() | Ilija Garašanin Илија Гарашанин (1812–1874) | 22 April 1852 | 26 March 1853 | Independent | First term. | ||
(12) | ![]() | Aleksa Simić Алекса Симић (1800–1872) | 26 March 1853 | 28 December 1855 | Independent | Second term. | ||
14 | ![]() | Aleksa Janković Алекса Јанковић (1806–1869) | 28 December 1855 | 10 June 1856 | Independent | |||
– | ![]() | Stefan Marković Стефан Марковић (1804–1864) | 10 June 1856 | 28 September 1856 | Independent | Acting. | ||
(12) | ![]() | Aleksa Simić Алекса Симић (1800–1872) | 28 September 1856 | 1 July 1857 | Independent | Third term. | ||
15 | ![]() | Stefan Marković Стефан Марковић (1804–1864) | 1 July 1857 | 12 June 1858 | Independent | |||
16 | ![]() | Stevan Magazinović Стеван Магазиновић (1804–1874) ![]() | 12 June 1858 | 18 April 1859 | Independent | |||
Miloš Obrenović![]() (1858–1860) | ||||||||
17 | ![]() | Cvetko Rajović Цветко Рајовић (1793–1873) ![]() | 18 April 1859 | 8 November 1860 | Independent | |||
Mihailo Obrenović![]() (1860–1868) | ||||||||
18 | ![]() | Filip Hristić Филип Христић (1819–1905) ![]() | 8 November 1860 | 21 October 1861 | Independent | |||
Presidents of the Ministry 1861–1882 | ||||||||
(13) | ![]() | Ilija Garašanin Илија Гарашанин (1812–1874) | 21 October 1861 | 15 November 1867 | Conservative Party | Second term. | ||
19 | ![]() | Jovan Ristić Јован Ристић (1831–1899) ![]() | 15 November 1867 | 3 December 1867 | Liberal Party | First term. | ||
20 | ![]() | Nikola Hristić Никола Христић (1818–1911) ![]() | 3 December 1867 | 3 July 1868 | Conservative Party | First term. | ||
Milan Obrenović ![]() (1868–1882) | ||||||||
21 | ![]() | Đorđe Cenić Ђорђе Ценић (1825–1903) | 3 July 1868 | 8 August 1869 | Conservative Party | |||
22 | ![]() | Radivoje Milojković Радивоје Милојковић (1833–1888) | 8 August 1869 | 22 August 1872 | Liberal Party | Removed from office when Prince Milan Obrenović, aged eighteen, came of age and appointed a new government. | ||
23 | ![]() | Milivoje Petrović Blaznavac Миливоје Петровић Блазнавац (1824–1873) ![]() | 22 August 1872 | 5 April 1873 | Independent | Military officer (general). Died in office of natural causes. | ||
(19) | ![]() | Jovan Ristić Јован Ристић (1831–1899) ![]() | 5 April 1873 | 3 November 1873 | Liberal Party | Second term; acting until 14 April 1873 | ||
24 | ![]() | Jovan Marinović Јован Мариновић (1821–1893) | 3 November 1873 | 7 December 1874 | Serbian Progressive Party | |||
25 | ![]() | Aćim Čumić Аћим Чумић (1836–1901) | 7 December 1874 | 3 February 1875 | Serbian Progressive Party | |||
26 | ![]() | Danilo Stefanović Данило Стефановић (1815–1886) | 3 February 1875 | 31 August 1875 | Conservative Party | |||
27 | ![]() | Stevča Mihailović Стевча Михаиловић (1804–1888) ![]() | 31 August 1875 | 8 October 1875 | Liberal Party | First term. | ||
28 | ![]() | Ljubomir Kaljević Љубомир Каљевић (1841–1907) | 8 October 1875 | 6 May 1876 | Serbian Progressive Party | |||
(27) | ![]() | Stevča Mihailović Стевча Михаиловић (1804–1888) ![]() | 6 May 1876 | 13 October 1878 | Liberal Party | Second term. | ||
(19) | ![]() | Jovan Ristić Јован Ристић (1831–1899) ![]() | 13 October 1878 | 2 November 1880 | Liberal Party | Third term. | ||
29 | ![]() | Milan Piroćanac Милан Пироћанац (1837–1897) ![]() | 2 November 1880 | 6 March 1882 | Serbian Progressive Party |
Serbian Progressive Party Conservative Party Liberal Party People's Radical Party Independent Radical Party Independent
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) | Term of office | Party | Note | Monarch | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Presidents of the Ministry 1882–1903 | ||||||||
(29) | ![]() | Milan Piroćanac Милан Пироћанац (1837–1897) ![]() | 6 March 1882 | 3 October 1883 | Serbian Progressive Party | Milan Obrenović | ||
(20) | ![]() | Nikola Hristić Никола Христић (1818–1911) ![]() | 3 October 1883 | 19 February 1884 | Conservative Party | Second term. | ||
30 | ![]() | Milutin Garašanin Милутин Гарашанин (1843–1908) | 19 February 1884 | 13 June 1887 | Serbian Progressive Party | |||
(19) | ![]() | Jovan Ristić Јован Ристић (1831–1899) ![]() | 13 June 1887 | 1 January 1888 | Liberal Party | Fourth term. | ||
31 | ![]() | Sava Grujić Сава Грујић (1840–1913) | 1 January 1888 | 27 April 1888 | People's Radical Party | First term. | ||
(20) | ![]() | Nikola Hristić Никола Христић (1818–1911) ![]() | 27 April 1888 | 19 January 1889 | Conservative Party | Third term. | ||
32 | ![]() | Kosta Protić Коста Протић (1831–1892) | 19 January 1889 | 7 March 1889 | Independent | Military officer (general). | ||
(31) | ![]() | Sava Grujić Сава Грујић (1840–1913) | 7 March 1889 | 23 February 1891 | People's Radical Party | Second term. | Alexander Obrenović ![]() (1889–1903) | |
33 | ![]() | Nikola Pašić Никола Пашић (1845–1926) ![]() | 23 February 1891 | 22 August 1892 | People's Radical Party | First term. | ||
34 | ![]() | Jovan Avakumović Јован Авакумовић (1841–1928) ![]() | 22 August 1892 | 13 April 1893 | Liberal Party | First term. Removed from office when King Alexander Obrenović, aged seventeen, staged a coup d'état , proclaimed himself of age and dismissed the regents and their government. | ||
35 | ![]() | Lazar Dokić Лазар Докић (1845–1893) | 13 April 1893 | 5 December 1893 | People's Radical Party | Died in office of natural causes. | ||
(31) | ![]() | Sava Grujić Сава Грујић (1840–1913) | 5 December 1893 | 24 January 1894 | People's Radical Party | Third term. | ||
36 | ![]() | Đorđe Simić Ђорђе Симић (1843–1921) | 24 January 1894 | 3 April 1894 | People's Radical Party | First term. | ||
37 | ![]() | Svetomir Nikolajević Светомир Николајевић (1844–1922) | 3 April 1894 | 27 October 1894 | People's Radical Party | |||
(20) | ![]() | Nikola Hristić Никола Христић (1818–1911) ![]() | 27 October 1894 | 7 July 1895 | Conservative Party | Fourth term. | ||
38 | ![]() | Stojan Novaković Стојан Новаковић (1842–1915) ![]() | 7 July 1895 | 27 December 1896 | Serbian Progressive Party | First term. | ||
(36) | ![]() | Đorđe Simić Ђорђе Симић (1843–1921) | 27 December 1896 | 19 October 1897 | People's Radical Party | Second term. | ||
39 | ![]() | Vladan Đorđević Владан Ђорђевић (1844–1930) ![]() | 19 October 1897 | 25 July 1900 | Serbian Progressive Party | |||
40 | ![]() | Aleksa Jovanović Алекса Јовановић (1846–1920) | 25 July 1900 | 3 April 1901 | Independent | |||
41 | ![]() | Mihailo Vujić Михаило Вујић (1853–1913) | 3 April 1901 | 20 October 1902 | People's Radical Party | |||
42 | ![]() | Petar Velimirović Петар Велимировић (1848–1921) | 20 October 1902 | 20 November 1902 | People's Radical Party | First term. | ||
43 | ![]() | Dimitrije Cincar-Marković Димитрије Цинцар-Марковић (1849–1903) | 20 November 1902 | 11 June 1903 | Independent | Military officer (general). Assassinated during the May Coup. | ||
Presidents of the Ministerial Council 1903–1918 | ||||||||
(34) | ![]() | Jovan Avakumović Јован Авакумовић (1841–1928) ![]() | 11 June 1903 | 4 October 1903 | Liberal Party | Second term. | Peter Karađorđević ![]() (1903–1918) | |
(31) | ![]() | Sava Grujić Сава Грујић (1840–1913) | 4 October 1903 | 10 December 1904 | People's Radical Party | Fourth term. | ||
(33) | ![]() | Nikola Pašić Никола Пашић (1845–1926) ![]() | 10 December 1904 | 28 May 1905 | People's Radical Party | Second term. | ||
44 | ![]() | Ljubomir Stojanović Љубомир Стојановић (1860–1930) ![]() | 28 May 1905 | 7 March 1906 | Independent Radical Party | |||
(31) | ![]() | Sava Grujić Сава Грујић (1840–1913) | 7 March 1906 | 29 April 1906 | People's Radical Party | Fifth term. | ||
(33) | ![]() | Nikola Pašić Никола Пашић (1845–1926) ![]() | 29 April 1906 | 20 July 1908 | People's Radical Party | Third term. | ||
(42) | ![]() | Petar Velimirović Петар Велимировић (1848–1921) | 20 July 1908 | 22 February 1909 | People's Radical Party | Second term. | ||
(38) | ![]() | Stojan Novaković Стојан Новаковић (1842–1915) ![]() | 22 February 1909 | 24 October 1909 | Serbian Progressive Party | Second term. | ||
(33) | ![]() | Nikola Pašić Никола Пашић (1845–1926) ![]() | 24 October 1909 | 4 July 1911 | People's Radical Party | Fourth term. | ||
45 | ![]() | Milovan Milovanović Милован Миловановић (1863–1912) | 4 July 1911 | 18 June 1912 | People's Radical Party | Died in office of natural causes. | ||
46 | ![]() | Marko Trifković Марко Трифковић (1864–1928) | 18 June 1912 | 12 September 1912 | People's Radical Party | |||
(33) | ![]() | Nikola Pašić Никола Пашић (1845–1926) ![]() | 12 September 1912 | 1 December 1918 | People's Radical Party | Fifth term. Became acting Prime Minister of Yugoslavia on 1 December 1918. |
League of Communists of Yugoslavia Socialist Party of Serbia
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) | Term of office | Party | Note | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
President of the Executive Council of the Supreme National Liberation Council 1941–1945 | |||||||
– | ![]() | Petar Stambolić Петар Стамболић (1912–2007) ![]() | September 1941 | 7 March 1945 | Communist Party of Yugoslavia | ||
Minister for Serbia 1945 | |||||||
– | ![]() | Jaša Prodanović Јаша Продановић (1867–1948) | 7 March 1945 | 9 April 1945 | Communist Party of Yugoslavia | ||
Prime Ministers 1945–1953 | |||||||
1 (47) | ![]() | Blagoje Nešković Благоје Нешковић (1907–1984) | 9 April 1945 | 5 September 1948 | Communist Party of Yugoslavia | ||
2 (48) | ![]() | Petar Stambolić Петар Стамболић (1912–2007) ![]() | 5 September 1948 | 5 February 1953 | Communist Party of Yugoslavia (renamed in 1952) | ||
League of Communists of Yugoslavia | |||||||
President of the Executive Council 1953–1991 | |||||||
(2) (48) | ![]() | Petar Stambolić Петар Стамболић (1912–2007) ![]() | 5 February 1953 | 16 December 1953 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
3 (49) | ![]() | Jovan Veselinov Јован Веселинов (1906–1982) | 16 December 1953 | 6 April 1957 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
4 (50) | ![]() | Miloš Minić Милош Минић (1914–2003) ![]() | 6 April 1957 | 9 June 1962 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
5 (51) | | Slobodan Penezić Krcun Слободан Пенезић Крцун (1918–1964) | 9 June 1962 | 6 November 1964 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | Killed in a suspicious traffic accident. | |
– | ![]() | Stevan Doronjski Стеван Дороњски (1919–1981) | 6 November 1964 | 17 November 1964 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | Acting (after Penezić's death) | |
6 (52) | ![]() | Dragi Stamenković Драги Стаменковић (1920–2004) | 17 November 1964 | 6 June 1967 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
7 (53) | ![]() | Đurica Jojkić Ђурица Јојкић (1914–1981) | 6 June 1967 | 7 May 1969 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
8 (54) | ![]() | Milenko Bojanić Миленко Бојанић (1924–1987) | 7 May 1969 | 6 May 1974 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
9 (55) | ![]() | Dušan Čkrebić Душан Чкребић (1927–2022) ![]() | 6 May 1974 | 6 May 1978 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
10 (56) | | Ivan Stambolić Иван Стамболић (1936–2000) | 6 May 1978 | 5 May 1982 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
11 (57) | ![]() | Branislav Ikonić Бранислав Иконић (1928–2002) | 5 May 1982 | 6 May 1986 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
12 (58) | ![]() | Desimir Jevtić Десимир Јевтић (1938–2017) ![]() | 6 May 1986 | 5 December 1989 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | ||
13 (59) | ![]() | Stanko Radmilović Станко Радмиловић (1936–2018) | 5 December 1989 | 15 January 1991 | League of Communists of Yugoslavia (until 1990) | The pan-Yugoslav League of Communists of Yugoslavia was dissolved in January 1990 into six political parties (one for each republic), in Serbia that was the Socialist Party of Serbia. | |
Socialist Party of Serbia |
Socialist Party of Serbia Democratic Party Democratic Alternative Social Democratic Union Democratic Party of Serbia
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) | Term of office | Party | Cabinet | Composition | Election | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prime Ministers 1991 onwards | ||||||||
1 (60) | ![]() | Dragutin Zelenović Драгутин Зеленовић (1928–2020) ![]() | 11 February 1991 – 23 December 1991 | Socialist Party of Serbia | Zelenović | SPS | 1990 | |
2 (61) | ![]() | Radoman Božović Радоман Божовић (born 1953) | 23 December 1991 – 10 February 1993 | Socialist Party of Serbia | Božović | SPS | ||
3 (62) | ![]() | Nikola Šainović Никола Шаиновић (born 1948) | 10 February 1993 – 18 March 1994 | Socialist Party of Serbia | Šainović | SPS (minority government supported by SRS) | 1992 | |
4 (63) | ![]() | Mirko Marjanović Мирко Марјановић (1937–2006) | 18 March 1994 – 24 October 2000 | Socialist Party of Serbia | Marjanović I | SPS–ND | 1993 | |
Marjanović II | SPS–JUL–SRS | 1997 | ||||||
3 (64) | ![]() | Milomir Minić Миломир Минић (born 1950) | 25 October 2000 – 25 January 2001 | Socialist Party of Serbia | Minić | SPS–DOS–SPO (transitional government formed after the Bulldozer Revolution) | ||
6 (65) | ![]() | Zoran Đinđić Зоран Ђинђић (1952–2003) ![]() | 25 January 2001 – 12 March 2003 ( assassinated in office) | Democratic Party (Democratic Opposition of Serbia) | Đinđić | DOS | 2000 | |
– | ![]() | Nebojša Čović Небојша Човић (born 1958) ![]() | 12 March 2003 – 17 March 2003 | Democratic Alternative (Democratic Opposition of Serbia) | Acting | |||
– | ![]() | Žarko Korać Жарко Кораћ (born 1947) | 17 March 2003 – 18 March 2003 | Social Democratic Union (Democratic Opposition of Serbia) | Acting | |||
7 (66) | ![]() | Zoran Živković Зоран Живковић (born 1960) ![]() | 18 March 2003 – 4 March 2004 | Democratic Party (Democratic Opposition of Serbia) | Živković | DOS | ||
8 (67) | ![]() | Vojislav Koštunica Војислав Коштуница (born 1944) ![]() | 4 March 2004 – 5 June 2006 | Democratic Party of Serbia | Koštunica I | DSS–G17+–SPO–NS (minority government supported by SPS) | 2003 |
Democratic Party of Serbia Democratic Party Socialist Party of Serbia Serbian Progressive Party Independent
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) | Term of office | Party | Cabinet | Composition | Election | President | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prime Ministers (2006 onwards) | ||||||||||
1 (67) | ![]() | Vojislav Koštunica Војислав Коштуница (born 1944) ![]() | 5 June 2006 – 7 July 2008 | Democratic Party of Serbia | Koštunica I | DSS–G17+–SPO–NS (minority government supported by SPS) | 2003 | Boris Tadić ![]() (2006–2012) | ||
Koštunica II | DS–DSS–G17+ NS–SDP | 2007 | ||||||||
2 (68) | ![]() | Mirko Cvetković Мирко Цветковић (born 1950) ![]() | 7 July 2008 – 27 July 2012 | Independent Democratic Party-affiliated | Cvetković | DS–SPS–G17+–SDPS PUPS–SPO–SDAS | 2008 | |||
3 (69) | ![]() | Ivica Dačić Ивица Дачић (born 1966) ![]() | 27 July 2012 – 27 April 2014 | Socialist Party of Serbia | Dačić | SNS–SPS–SDPS PUPS–NS–SDAS–PS URS (until 2013) | 2012 | Tomislav Nikolić ![]() (2012–2017) | ||
4 (70) | ![]() | Aleksandar Vučić Александар Вучић (born 1970) ![]() | 27 April 2014 – 31 May 2017 | Serbian Progressive Party | Vučić I | SNS–SPS SDPS–PS–NS | 2014 | |||
Vučić II | SNS–SPS SDPS–PS–PUPS | 2016 | ||||||||
– | ![]() | Ivica Dačić Ивица Дачић (born 1966) ![]() | 31 May 2017 – 29 June 2017 | Socialist Party of Serbia | Acting | Aleksandar Vučić ![]() (2017–) | ||||
5 (71) | ![]() | Ana Brnabić Ана Брнабић (born 1975) ![]() | 29 June 2017 – Incumbent | Independent Serbian Progressive Party-affiliated (until October 2019) | Brnabić | SNS–SPS–SDPS PS–PUPS–SNP | ||||
Serbian Progressive Party (from October 2019) [16] | ||||||||||
Brnabić II | SNS–SPS–SPAS SDPS–PUPS–PS–SNP | 2020 | ||||||||
Brnabić III | SNS–SPS–DSHV SDPS–PUPS–JS–SPP | 2022 |
The Government of Serbia, formally the Government of the Republic of Serbia, commonly abbreviated to Serbian Government, is the executive branch of government in Serbia.
The President of Serbia and Montenegro was the head of state of Serbia and Montenegro. From its establishment in 1992 until 2003, when the country was reconstituted as a confederacy via constitutional reform, the head of state was known as the President of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. With the constitutional reforms of 2003 and the merging of the offices of head of government and head of state, the full title of the president was President of Serbia and Montenegro and Chairman of the Council of Ministers of Serbia and Montenegro. In 2006 the office was abolished as the state union was dissolved, with Serbia and Montenegro becoming independent countries and was followed by Kosovo in 2008 although it received limited international recognition.
Jakov Nenadović was a Serbian voivode and politician who served as the prime minister of Serbia from 31 December 1810 to 22 January 1811. He was the first Serbian interior minister. Nenadović was the most influential figure in Serbia at the time beside Karađorđe and Janko Katić.
The prime minister of Serbia and Montenegro was the head of government of Serbia and Montenegro from its establishment in 1992 up until the state's dissolution in 2006. Between 1992–2003 the full name of the office was President of the Federal Government of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, while after the constitutional reforms of 2003 the title was Chairman of the Council of Ministers of Serbia and Montenegro. The office was merged in 2003 with the head of state, providing for one person to hold both the office of President of Serbia and Montenegro and Chairman of the Council of Ministers of Serbia and Montenegro.
The Serbian Progressive Party has been the ruling political party of Serbia since 2012.
HadžiMilutin Savić Garašanin was a Serbian revolutionary, obor-knez of Jasenica, and member of the National Council under Miloš Obrenović. He is the father of Ilija Garašanin and grandfather of Milutin Garašanin (1845-1898), one of the founders and leaders of Serbian Progressive Party.
Miloš Vučević is a Serbian lawyer and politician serving as deputy prime minister of Serbia and minister of defence since 2022. A member and vice-president of the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), he served as mayor of Novi Sad from 2012 to 2022.
Stefan Stefanović, known as Tenka (Тенка), was a Serbian politician who served as the Prime Minister of Serbia. Stefanović was a leader of pro-Obrenović group that conspired against Prince Alexander Karađorđević. As a result, in 1840, Tenka Stefanović was forced to join a group of Constitutionalists who were sent in exile to Constantinople.
Naum Krnar was the secretary of Karađorđe, the leader of the First Serbian Uprising. Krnar was an ethnic Greek, hailing from Thessaly. He spoke several languages and worked as a merchant in Belgrade. With the outbreak of the uprising, Krnar, who had enriched himself through the trade of leather and fur, immediately joined Karađorđe in the organization, and became his personal secretary and chairman in the Serbian Ruling Council. It is unknown whether he fled Serbia with Karađorđe after the suppression by the Ottomans in 1813. As many of the Serbian commanders, he found refuge in the Russian Empire. He was a founding member of the Filiki Eteria (1814). On 12 July 1817, on the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul, he and Karađorđe secretly crossed the Danube into Serbia, in order to continue the Serbian Revolution, however, the leader of the Second Serbian Uprising, Miloš Obrenović, learnt of this and had them both beheaded, their heads sent to the Sultan in Constantinople. Karađorđe and Krnar stayed in a cottage in the village of Radovanj in the Smederevo nahija. Nikola Novaković, a henchman of Vujica Vulićević, first killed the sleeping Karađorđe with an axe blow to the head, then shot Krnar, who was washing himself and getting water for Karađorđe in the river downwards from the cottage, with a rifle, on 13 July. Novaković beheaded both with his yatagan, and took them with him on horse to Kolare, and then to Belgrade, where he gave them to Miloš Obrenović. Obrenović in turn gave them to Marashli Ali Pasha who took them to Constantinople. The heads were on public display for seven days. They were then held at the Museum of Sciences in Istanbul. They say that Greeks later stole the heads, and took them to Athens to be held in a museum. The bodies of Karađorđe and Krnar were buried in a tomb in Radovanj by priest Jovan and Dragić Vojkić. The body of Karađorđe was transferred to Oplenac in 1919, while Krnar's body is still buried in the tomb.
The Government of Serbia, the second one led by prime minister Aleksandar Vučić, was elected on 11 August 2016 by a majority vote in the National Assembly. Parliamentary election was held on 24 April 2016, and the ruling coalition of the Serbian Progressive Party and the Socialist Party of Serbia, running in separate lists, won the total of 160 out of 250 seats and retained its parliamentary majority. While the Vučić's Progressive party again won enough seats to form the government alone, he decided to continue cooperation with the Socialists.
Ana Brnabić is a Serbian politician serving as the prime minister of Serbia since 2017. She is the first woman and first openly gay person to hold the office.
The cabinet of the Government of Serbia, led by prime minister Ana Brnabić, was elected on 29 June 2017 by a majority vote in the National Assembly. It succeeded the second cabinet of Aleksandar Vučić, formed after the 2016 parliamentary election, after Vučić resigned the prime minister post following his election as the President of Serbia. Vučić appointed Ana Brnabić, previously the Minister of Public Administration, as his successor on 15 June 2017.
Parliamentary elections will be held in Serbia by 30 April 2026 to elect members of the National Assembly.
The second cabinet of Ana Brnabić was the Government of Serbia from 2020 to 2022. It was elected on 28 October 2020 by a majority vote in the National Assembly. It succeeded the first cabinet of Ana Brnabić, which was formed in July 2017, shortly after Aleksandar Vučić's departure as prime minister due his election as president of Serbia.
Tatjana Matić is a Serbian politician who served as minister of trade, tourism and telecommunications from 2020 to 2022. A member of the Social Democratic Party of Serbia (SDPS), she served as state secretary in the first cabinet of Ana Brnabić.
Jovica Zarkula is a politician in Serbia. He served for two terms as mayor of Vršac, was a member of the Assembly of Vojvodina from 2008 to 2011, and was a state secretary in the Government of Serbia from 2008 to 2012.
The third cabinet of Ana Brnabić was formed on 26 October 2022, following the latter's election as Prime Minister of Serbia by the National Assembly on the same day. It succeeded the second cabinet of Ana Brnabić and is the incumbent government of Serbia since 26 October 2022.
The cabinet of Matija Nenadović was formed on 27 August 1805. It was the first government of Serbia. It held office until April 1807, when it was replaced by the cabinet of Mladen Milovanović.
The first cabinet of Mladen Milovanović was formed in April 1807. It held office until 31 December 1810, when it was dismissed and replaced by the cabinet of Jakov Nenadović.
The cabinet of Jakov Nenadović was formed on 31 December 1810 after the dismissal of Mladen Milovanović. It held office until 11 January 1811, when it was dismissed and replaced by the cabinet of Đorđe Petrović, who was also the head of state of Revolutionary Serbia at the time.
In 1805, the Governing Council held its sessions in Smederevo, the 'capital of our despots and emperors'...
Nenadović, who was in his late twenties, was one of the uprising's most prominent leaders and commanders, and he later became the first prime minister of Serbia.
He finally gave up his post as President of the Legislative Council in April 1807, and his place was taken by Mladen Milovanović