ZAGREB – Croatia’s populist President Zoran Milanovic was re-elected in a landslide, defeating his conservative rival in the run-off on Jan 12, official results showed.
Mr Milanovic took more than 74 per cent of the vote and Mr Dragan Primorac, backed by the centre-right HDZ party that governs Croatia, almost 26 per cent, with nearly all the votes counted.
It was the highest score achieved by a presidential candidate since the former Yugoslav republic’s independence in 1991.
While the role of the president is largely ceremonial in Croatia, Mr Milanovic’s wide victory is the latest setback for the HDZ and Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic – Mr Milanovic’s political arch-rival – after a high-profile corruption affair in November 2024.
Mr Milanovic to his supporters, who had gathered at a Zagreb art and music club to celebrate his success, said: “Croatia, thank you!”
In a reference to the HDZ-led government, he said: “I see this victory as a recognition of my work in the last five years and a plebiscite message from the Croatian people to those who should hear it.”
The outspoken Mr Milanovic, backed by the left-wing opposition, won more than 49 per cent of the vote in the contest’s first round two weeks ago – narrowly missing an outright victory.
Turnout on Jan 12 was nearly 44 per cent, slightly lower than in the first round, the electoral commission said.
The vote was held as the European Union member nation of 3.8 million people struggles with the highest inflation rate in the euro zone, endemic corruption and a labour shortage.
‘Counterbalance’
Even with its limited roles, many Croatians see the presidency as key to providing a political balance by preventing one party from holding all the levers of power.
Croatia has been mainly governed by the HDZ since independence.
The party “has too much control and Plenkovic is transforming into an autocrat,” Ms Mia, a 35-year-old administrator from Zagreb who declined to give her last name, told AFP, explaining her support for the incumbent.
Mr Milanovic, a former left-wing prime minister, won the presidency in 2020 with the backing of the main opposition Social Democrats party.
A key figure in the country’s political scene for nearly two decades, he has increasingly employed offensive, populist rhetoric during frequent attacks aimed at EU and local officials.
“Milanovic is a sort of political omnivore,” said political analyst Zarko Puhovski, adding that the President was largely seen as the “only, at least symbolic, counterbalance to the government and Plenkovic’s power”.
His no-holds-barred speaking style has sent Mr Milanovic’s popularity soaring and helped attract the backing of right-wing supporters.
Supporters of Croatian President Zoran Milanovic celebrating after the first exit poll results in Zagreb on Jan 12.PHOTO: AFP
Earlier on Jan 12, after voting in Zagreb, Mr Milanovic criticised Brussels as “in many ways autocratic and non-representative”, run by officials who were not elected.
The 58-year-old also regularly pans the HDZ over the party’s perennial problems with corruption, while also referring to Mr Plenkovic as “Brussels’ clerk”.
‘Russian player’
Mr Primorac, a former education and science minister returning to politics after a 15-year absence, has campaigned as a unifier for Croatia. The 59-year-old also insisted on patriotism and family values.
“With my programme, I wanted to send a clear message that Croatia can and deserves better”, he told supporters on the evening of Jan 12 as the official results confirmed his crushing defeat.
But critics were saying Mr Primorac lacked political charisma and failed to rally the HDZ base behind him.
He accused Mr Milanovic of being a “pro-Russian puppet” who has undermined Croatia’s credibility in Nato and the European Union.
Croatian presidential candidate Dragan Primorac (left) with Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic in Zagreb on Jan 12.PHOTO: REUTERS
Mr Milanovic condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but has also criticised the West’s military support for Kyiv.
He is also a prominent opponent of a programme that would have seen Croatian soldiers help train Ukrainian troops in Germany.
“The defence of democracy is not to tell everyone who doesn’t think like you that he’s a ‘Russian player’,” Mr Milanovic told reporters on Jan 12.
Such a communication style is “in fact totalitarian”, he added.
Meanwhile, young Croatians voiced frustration over the lack of discussion among political leaders over the issues that interest them, such as housing or students’ standard of living.
“We hear them (politicians) talking mostly about old, recycled issues. What’s important to young people doesn’t even cross their minds,” said 20-year-old student Ivana Vuckovic. AFP
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Publish date : 2025-01-12 18:41:00
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