Jump to content

Government of Serbia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Serbian government)
Government of the Republic of Serbia
Влада Републике Србије
Vlada Republike Srbije
Map
Overview
Established1991; 34 years ago (1991)
(as the Government of Serbia)
1805; 220 years ago (1805)
(as the Serbian Governing Council)
StateRepublic of Serbia
LeaderPrime Minister
(nominated by the President of the Republic)
Appointed byNational Assembly
Ministries25
Responsible toNational Assembly
HeadquartersGovernment Building,
11 Nemanjina Street, Belgrade
Websitewww.srbija.gov.rs

The Government of Serbia (Serbian: Влада Србије, romanizedVlada Srbije), formally the Government of the Republic of Serbia (Serbian: Влада Републике Србије, romanizedVlada Republike Srbije), commonly abbreviated to Serbian Government (Serbian: српска Влада, romanizedsrpska Vlada), is the main executive branch of government in Serbia.

The Government is led by the President of the Government (Serbian: Председник Владе, romanizedPredsednik Vlade), informally abbreviated to premier (Serbian: Премијер, romanizedPremijer) or prime minister. The prime minister is nominated by the president of the Republic from among those candidates who enjoy majority support in the National Assembly; the candidate is then chosen by the Assembly. There are 30 other government members, serving as deputy prime ministers, government ministers or both; they are chosen by the prime minister and confirmed by the National Assembly. The current government is led by Prime Minister Đuro Macut.

The affairs of government are decided by the Cabinet of Ministers, which is the main executive body of the Government. It is composed of the prime minister and ministers and meets weekly at the Government Building in Belgrade, which houses the Office of the Prime Minister as well as the Secretariat–General of the Government.

Powers

[edit]

The Government is the main executive power of the Serbian state. According to the Constitution of Serbia, the Government:

  • determines and guides internal and foreign policies;
  • executes laws adopted by the National Assembly;
  • adopts regulations and other acts for the purpose of executing laws;
  • proposes legislation to the National Assembly
  • directs and coordinates the work of state administration and supervises its work

Composition

[edit]

The government is headed by the prime minister. The prime minister has deputies (appointed by the prime minister with the approval of the National Assembly by absolute majority), currently four, who also serve as government ministers; the first first deputy prime minister also discharges the duties of the prime minister when the latter is incapacitated or absent. There are other ministers (Serbian: министри, romanizedministri), who are appointed by the prime minister with the approval of the National Assembly by absolute majority. The ministers, currently 25, head individual ministries charged with particular sectors of activities, with the exception of ministers without portfolio, currently five, who are not at the head of ministries. State secretaries (Serbian: државни секретари, romanizeddržavni sekretari), appointed by the Government for the term of the minister, are the highest officials below minister, responsible to the minister; there are one or more state secretaries in the ministries.

Besides the government ministries, there are numerous interministerial bodies that operate within the framework of the government and are directly subordinated to the Office of Prime Minister:[1]

Incumbent government

[edit]

The incumbent cabinet was sworn on 16 April 2025 by a majority vote in the National Assembly.[2] It is the first cabinet of Đuro Macut, who became the prime minister after Miloš Vučević resigned from the office due to 2024–present Serbian anti-corruption protests.

Portfolio Minister Took office Party
Prime Minister
Đuro Macut Independent 16 April 2025
Deputy Prime Ministers
Finance Siniša Mali SNS 16 April 2025
Internal Affairs Ivica Dačić SPS 16 April 2025
Economy Adrijana Mesarović SNS 16 April 2025
Ministers
Foreign Affairs Marko Đurić SNS 16 April 2025
Defence Bratislav Gašić SNS 16 April 2025
Justice Nenad Vujić Independent 16 April 2025
Agriculture, Forestry, and Water Management Dragan Glamočić Independent 16 April 2025
Environmental Protection Sara Pavkov SNS 16 April 2025
Construction, Transport, and Infrastructure Aleksandra Sofronijević Independent 16 April 2025
Mining and Energy Dubravka Đedović Independent 16 April 2025
Internal and Foreign Trade Jagoda Lazarević Independent 16 April 2025
State Administration and Local Self-Government Snežana Paunović SPS 16 April 2025
Human and Minority Rights and Social Dialogue Demo Beriša Independent 16 April 2025
European Integration Nemanja Starović SNS 16 April 2025
Education Dejan Vuk Stanković Independent 16 April 2025
Health Zlatibor Lončar SNS 16 April 2025
Labour, Employment, Veteran and Social Policy Milica Đurđević Stamenkovski SSZ 16 April 2025
Family Welfare and Demography Jelena Žarić Kovačević SNS 16 April 2025
Sports Zoran Gajić Independent 16 April 2025
Culture Nikola Selaković SNS 16 April 2025
Rural Welfare Milan Krkobabić PUPS 16 April 2025
Science, Technological Development, and Innovation Béla Bálint Independent 16 April 2025
Tourism and Youth Husein Memić SDPS 16 April 2025
Information and Telecommunications Boris Bratina Independent 16 April 2025
Public Investments Darko Glišić SNS 16 April 2025
Ministers without portfolio
Novica Tončev SPS 16 April 2025
Đorđe Milićević SPS 16 April 2025
Usame Zukorlić SPP 16 April 2025
Nenad Popović SNP 16 April 2025
Tatjana Macura Independent 16 April 2025

History

[edit]

Since 23 December 1990 (the first multi-party parliamentary elections held following the post-World War II Communist rule), Serbia has had a total of eighteen governments headed by fourteen different prime ministers.

Assumed office Prime Minister Party in Office
(leading)
Cabinet
11 February 1991 Dragutin Zelenović Socialist Party of Serbia Cabinet of Dragutin Zelenović
23 December 1992 Radoman Božović Cabinet of Radoman Božović
10 February 1993 Nikola Šainović Cabinet of Nikola Šainović
18 March 1994 Mirko Marjanović Cabinet of Mirko Marjanović I
24 March 1998 Cabinet of Mirko Marjanović II
25 October 2000 Milomir Minić Cabinet of Milomir Minić
25 January 2001 Zoran Đinđić
Zoran Živković
Democratic Party Cabinet of Zoran Đinđić
3 March 2004 Vojislav Koštunica Democratic Party of Serbia Cabinet of Vojislav Koštunica I
15 May 2007 Cabinet of Vojislav Koštunica II
7 July 2008 Mirko Cvetković Democratic Party Cabinet of Mirko Cvetković
27 July 2012 Ivica Dačić Serbian Progressive Party Cabinet of Ivica Dačić
27 April 2014 Aleksandar Vučić Cabinet of Aleksandar Vučić I
11 August 2016 Cabinet of Aleksandar Vučić II
29 June 2017 Ana Brnabić Cabinet of Ana Brnabić I
28 October 2020 Cabinet of Ana Brnabić II
26 October 2022 Cabinet of Ana Brnabić III
2 May 2024 Miloš Vučević Cabinet of Miloš Vučević
16 April 2025 Đuro Macut Cabinet of Đuro Macut

Timeline of (leading) party in office

[edit]
Đuro MacutMiloš VučevićAna BrnabićAleksandar VučićIvica DačićMirko CvetkovićVojislav KoštunicaZoran ĐinđićMilomir MinićMirko MarjanovićNikola ŠainovićRadoman BožovićDragutin Zelenović

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Година LXXIII – број 61". pravno-informacioni-sistem.rs (in Serbian). Službeni glasnik RS. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  2. ^ https://www.rferl.org/a/serbia-appoints-new-government/33387581.html
[edit]
Previous:
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Socialist Republic of Serbia
Socialist Republic of Montenegro
Government ruling Central Serbia, Vojvodina, Kosovo and Metohija
1992–present
Incumbent
Next:
Government of Kosovo
1999–present
Government ruling Old Montenegro and Bay of Kotor
1992–2006
Next:
Government of Montenegro
2006–present
Previous:
Representative for Yugoslavia in the United Nations
1945–1992
Representative for Serbia in the United Nations
2000–present
Incumbent
Next:
Representative for the Government of
Montenegro
in the United Nations
2006–present