Second cabinet of Ana Brnabić | |
---|---|
16th Cabinet of Republic of Serbia | |
2020–2022 | |
Date formed | 28 October 2020 |
Date dissolved | 26 October 2022 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Aleksandar Vučić |
Head of government | Ana Brnabić |
No. of ministers | 21 (ministers only) 23 (with ministers without portfolio) |
Total no. of members | 29 (including Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Ministers) |
Member parties | SNS, SPS, SDPS, PS, PUPS, SNP |
History | |
Election(s) | 21 June 2020 |
Predecessor | First cabinet of Ana Brnabić |
Successor | Third cabinet of Ana Brnabić |
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.[1]
The cabinet is composed of members of the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), Movement of Socialists (PS), Party of United Pensioners of Serbia (PUPS), Social Democratic Party of Serbia (SDPS), Serbian People's Party (SNP) and independents. The Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians (VMSZ), Justice and Reconciliation Party (SPP), and United Peasant Party (USS) serve as confidence and supply in the government.
The government was in acting mode from 15 February 2022, when the 12th convocation of the National Assembly ended due to the proclamation of snap parliamentary elections.[2] It was succeeded by the third cabinet of Ana Brnabić on 26 October 2022.
History
The cabinet comprised ministers from the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), Serbian Patriotic Alliance (SPAS), Movement of Socialists (PS), Social Democratic Party of Serbia (SDPS) and the Party of United Pensioners of Serbia (PUPS), as well as some without a party affiliation. The cabinet had 11 women out of 21 total ministers and was among the most gender-balanced governments in the world.[3] Three new ministries were also formed: the Ministry of the Village Care, Ministry of Family and Demography and the Ministry of Human and Minority Rights and Social Dialogue.[1]
Supporting parties
Party | Main ideology | Political position | Leader | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Government parties | ||||
Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) | Populism | Big tent | Aleksandar Vučić | |
Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) | Social democracy | Centre-left | Ivica Dačić | |
Movement of Socialists (PS) | Left-wing nationalism | Centre-left | Aleksandar Vulin | |
Party of United Pensioners of Serbia (PUPS) | Pensioners' interests | Centre | Milan Krkobabić | |
Social Democratic Party of Serbia (SDPS) | Social democracy | Centre-left | Rasim Ljajić | |
Serbian People's Party (SNP) | National conservatism | Right-wing | Nenad Popović | |
Confidence and supply | ||||
United Serbia (JS) | National conservatism | Right-wing | Dragan Marković | |
Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians (VMSZ) | Hungarian minority interests | Centre-right | István Pásztor | |
Justice and Reconciliation Party (SPP) | Bosniak minority interests | Right-wing | Muamer Zukorlić |
Cabinet members
References
- 1 2 N.N.G. "OVO SU NOVI MINISTRI Ana Brnabić upravo iznela IMENA po resorima, ovako će izledati nova VLADA SRBIJE". Blic.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 2020-10-25.
- ↑ "Raspisani parlamentarni i lokalni izbori, Vučić poručio - neka su vam srećni". N1 (in Serbian). 2022-02-15. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
- ↑ "Next Serb Government Among Most Gender-Balanced In the World". Bloomberg.com. 2020-10-25. Retrieved 2020-10-26.