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Serbian parliamentary election, 2016

Serbian parliamentary election, 2016
Serbia
← 2014 24 April 2016 Next →
Turnout 56.07%
Party Leader % Seats ±
SNS coalition Aleksandar Vučić 48.25 131 -39
SPSJSZS Ivica Dačić 10.95 29 -4
SRS Vojislav Šešelj 8.10 22 +22
DJB Saša Radulović 6.02 16 +16
DS coalition Bojan Pajtić 6.02 16 -5
DveriDSS Sanda Rašković Ivić 5.04 13 +13
SDSLDPLSV Boris Tadić 5.02 13 -2
VMSZVMDP István Pásztor 1.50 4 -2
BDZ S Muamer Zukorlić 0.86 2 New
SDA S Sulejman Ugljanin 0.80 2 -1
ZES Goran Čabradi 0.63 1 New
PDD Ardita Sinani 0.43 1 -1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Serbian parliamentary election (2016) by majority of popular vote in each district.svg
Election results by district
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Aleksandar Vučić
SNS
Aleksandar Vučić
SNS

Parliamentary elections were held in Serbia on 24 April 2016. They were originally due to be held by March 2018, but on 17 January 2016 Prime Minister Aleksandar Vučić called for a snap election claiming Serbia "needs four more years of stability so that it is ready to join the European Union". The parliamentary elections were held simultaneously with provincial election in Vojvodina and nationwide local elections.

The total turnout was 56%. Vučić's Serbian Progressive Party-led coalition retained its majority, winning 131 of the 250 seats. In contrast to the 2014 elections, a record-breaking seven non-minority lists passed the 5% threshold. Several parties returned to the National Assembly, including the Serbian Radical Party, the Liberal Democratic Party and the Democratic Party of Serbia, while three parties entered for the first time; the liberal Enough is Enough, the conservative Dveri (in coalition with the Democratic Party of Serbia) and the Green Party (as a Slovak ethnic minority list).

Vučić announced formation of the new government by early June. He stated that the Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians were the only certain partners in the cabinet, and remained ambiguous about the future cooperation with the Socialist Party of Serbia, the coalition partners in the previous government. After a two-month delay, Vučić announced the new cabinet on 8 August, consisting of eight old and eight new ministers, retaining the coalition with the Socialist Party. The government was approved by the National Assembly on 10 August.


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