
Vučić to Resign Serbian Presidency, Call Early Elections and Seek Premiership
The Serbian leader’s announcement, made at a mass rally, follows 18 months of anti-corruption protests and opens a succession puzzle shaped by constitutional limits and geopolitical balancing.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić declared on Saturday that he will resign within weeks and trigger early presidential and parliamentary elections, while signalling he may return as prime minister. Speaking at a Belgrade rally of his Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) that the interior ministry said drew over 200,000 people, Vučić told supporters he would serve “only a few more weeks” as head of state and that a vote would be held within three to four months. He added that a decision on whether to stand as a prime ministerial candidate would be made transparently by the end of July. The move comes after more than a year of student-led demonstrations—the largest since the fall of Slobodan Milošević—sparked by the November 2024 collapse of a station canopy in Novi Sad that killed 16 people and exposed alleged graft in public contracting.
For the protest movement, the early election pledge does not resolve the core grievance. Student groups and opposition figures, as reported by French and Russian media, argue that the problem is not merely who occupies the presidency but a political system that has concentrated power around Vučić for over a decade. They continue to demand judicial reforms, accountability for the Novi Sad deaths, and an end to impunity. Vučić, who has held top office since 2014, has used early elections five times in seven parliamentary cycles to renew his mandate at moments of party strength. Constitutional term limits bar him from a third presidential term, but the prime minister’s post carries wider executive authority under Serbian law, a fact noted by analysts in German-speaking media who draw parallels with the power rotations of Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Viewed from Brussels, the most palatable successor among the figures Vučić is said to be “testing” is parliamentary speaker Ana Brnabić, a former prime minister with extensive EU negotiation experience and a reputation as a pragmatist. Moscow-based analysts, by contrast, are described in Russian independent reporting as prioritising the preservation of the current system over any individual name; the preferred formula is a loyal president alongside Vučić as premier, a configuration that would allow Belgrade to continue its balancing act between Western institutions and ties with Russia and China. Vučić himself has accused the European Union of seeking to dictate Serbia’s foreign policy and force a rupture with Moscow and Beijing, a charge he repeated last month.
The succession dilemma is acute because, as regional observers note, Vučić has so thoroughly cleared the political space that no alternative figure commands comparable independent weight. Possible candidates include finance minister Siniša Mali, SNS party president Miloš Vučević, and current prime minister Đuro Macut, but none has yet emerged as a clear frontrunner. The election timeline remains approximate, with Vučić indicating a ballot in three to four months and a personal decision on the premiership by late July. Until then, the protest movement and the opposition face the task of uniting behind a credible presidential candidate while the ruling party mobilises its base for a campaign that will determine whether Serbia’s dominant political figure merely changes office or genuinely loosens his grip.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
Vučić announces his resignation and early parliamentary elections within three to four months, stating that his decision on whether to run for prime minister will be transparent. The Russian press reports these statements as a routine political procedure, without adding historical or critical context.
Vučić's resignation is portrayed as a strategic retreat to remain in power by switching from president to prime minister. The European press highlights his past as Milošević's propaganda minister and his broken promises on EU integration, framing the move as a cynical power consolidation.
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