United Serbia Јединствена Србија | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | JS |
President | Života Starčević (acting) |
Parliamentary leader | Vacant |
Founder | Dragan Marković |
Founded | 15 February 2004 |
Split from | Party of Serbian Unity |
Headquarters | Železnička 2, Jagodina |
Youth wing | Youth of United Serbia |
Women's wing | Aktiv žena |
Ideology | |
Political position | Right-wing |
Parliamentary group | United Serbia |
Colours |
|
National Assembly | 5 / 250 |
Assembly of Vojvodina | 2 / 120 |
City Assembly of Belgrade | 1 / 110 |
Website | |
jedinstvenasrbija | |
United Serbia (Serbian: Јединствена Србија, romanized: Jedinstvena Srbija, abbr. JS) is a national-conservative political party in Serbia.
It was founded on 15 February 2004,[1] as a split from the far-right Party of Serbian Unity with Dragan Marković Palma elected as the leader on the first party assembly.[2] During its early years, the party had close relations with other right-wing parties such as New Serbia and Democratic Party of Serbia, even participating with them in the 2007 parliamentary election.[3] During the 2008 parliamentary election, they participated in a coalition around the Socialist Party of Serbia and supported the accession of Serbia into the European Union.[4][2]
United Serbia was the first to announce the beginning of talks with the coalition For a European Serbia, led by the President Boris Tadić, on forming the new government. The party leader was Dragan Marković, former mayor of Jagodina, until his death in November 2024.
The United Serbia, including its leader Palma, supported the "Serbs for Trump" campaign and Donald Trump in the 2020 United States presidential election.[5]
JS is positioned on the right-wing on the political spectrum,[6] and it has been described as populist.[7][8] and national-conservative.[9] It is staunchly socially conservative,[10] and it also advocates regionalism.[10]
In 2012, JS had 82,000 members.[11]
Year | Leader | Popular vote | % of popular vote | # | # of seats | Seat change | Coalition | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2007 | Dragan Marković | 667,615 | 16.83% | 3rd | 2 / 250
|
2 | JS–DSS–NS | Support |
2008 | 313,896 | 7.75% | 4th | 3 / 250
|
1 | JS–SPS–PUPS | Support | |
2012 | 567,689 | 15.18% | 3rd | 7 / 250
|
4 | JS–SPS–PUPS | Support | |
2014 | 484,607 | 13.94% | 2nd | 7 / 250
|
0 | JS–SPS–PUPS | Support | |
2016 | 413,770 | 11.28% | 2nd | 6 / 250
|
1 | JS–SPS–Zeleni–KP | Support | |
2020 | 334,333 | 10.78% | 2nd | 8 / 250
|
2 | JS–SPS–Zeleni–KP | Support | |
2022 | 435,274 | 11.79% | 3rd | 8 / 250
|
0 | JS–SPS–Zeleni | Government (2022–23) | |
Support (2023–) | ||||||||
2023 | 249,916 | 6.73% | 3rd | 5 / 250
|
3 | JS–SPS–Zeleni | Support |
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
Year | Candidate | 1st round popular vote | % of popular vote | 2nd round popular vote | % of popular vote | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Ljiljana Aranđelović | 11th | 11,796 | 0.38% | — | — | — | |
2008 | Velimir Ilić | 3rd | 305,828 | 7.57% | — | — | — | Supported Ilić |
2012 | Ivica Dačić | 3rd | 556,013 | 14.89% | — | — | — | Supported Dačić |
2017 | Aleksandar Vučić | 1st | 2,012,788 | 56.01% | — | — | — | Supported Vučić |
2022 | 1st | 2,224,914 | 60.01% | — | — | — |