14th National Assembly of Serbia
Current National Assembly of Serbia
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The fourteenth convocation of the National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia (Serbian: ЧеÑÑнаеÑÑи Ñазив ÐаÑодне ÑкÑпÑÑине РепÑблике СÑбиÑе, romanized: Äetrnaesti saziv Narodne skupÅ¡tine Republike Srbije) is the ongoing convocation of the National Assembly of Serbia. It was constituted in the House of the National Assembly on 6 February 2024.
- Third cabinet of Ana BrnabiÄ (acting, until 2 May 2024)
- Cabinet of MiloÅ¡ VuÄeviÄ (2 May 2024â16 April 2025)
- Cabinet of Äuro Macut (since 16 April 2025)
| Fourteenth convocation of the National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| |||
Seat composition of the 14th National Assembly | |||
| Overview | |||
| Meeting place | House of the National Assembly, 13 Nikola PaÅ¡iÄ Square, Belgrade | ||
| Term | 6 February 2024 â | ||
| Election | 17 December 2023 | ||
| Government |
| ||
| Website | parlament.gov.rs | ||
| Members | 250 | ||
| President | Ana BrnabiÄ (SNS) | ||
| Vice-presidents |
| ||
| Party control | SNS groupâSPS group majority | ||
In the 2023 parliamentary election, the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS)-led electoral alliance re-gained its parliamentary majority, winning 129 seats in total. The second placed was the Serbia Against Violence coalition, which won 65 seats. The Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) electoral alliance suffered major losses, only winning 18 seats in total. Ana BrnabiÄ of SNS was elected president of the National Assembly on 20 March. On 2 May 2024, the National Assembly elected the cabinet of MiloÅ¡ VuÄeviÄ. On 16 April 2025, the National Assembly elected the cabinet of Äuro Macut.
Background
Parliamentary elections in Serbia were held on 17 December 2023.[1] The election resulted in a victory of the Serbia Must Not Stop electoral alliance led by the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), winning 129 seats. The second placed was the Serbia Against Violence coalition, which won 65 seats. The electoral alliance of the Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) collapsed and only won 18 seats, this being its worst result since the 2007 parliamentary election.[2]
Leadership
The leadership of the fourteenth convocation was elected during its constitutive session on 20 March.[3] Ana BrnabiÄ of SNS was elected president of the National Assembly, while Sandra BožiÄ of SNS, Marina RaguÅ¡ of SNS, Snežana PaunoviÄ of SPS, Elvira Kovács of Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians, Edin Äerlek of Justice and Reconciliation Party, and Jovan JanjiÄ of We â Voice from the People were elected vice-presidents. SrÄan SmiljaniÄ, an independent politician, was elected general secretary.[4]
BožiÄ unexpectedly resigned from her positions in the National Assembly on 7 May.[5][6] A day later, the Assembly of Vojvodina elected a new government, in which BožiÄ was chosen as vice president of the government of Vojvodina.[7] Nevena ÄuriÄ was elected vice-president on 19 March 2025.[8]
PaunoviÄ resigned on 15 April 2025 to serve in the government of Serbia.[9]
| Decision on the election of the president of the National Assembly Ana BrnabiÄ (SNS) | ||
| Ballot â | 20 March 2024 | |
|---|---|---|
| Required majority â | 126 out of 250 | |
153 / 250 | ||
5 / 250 | ||
| Abstentions | 0 / 250 | |
92 / 250 | ||
| Source:[10] | ||
Timeline
The fourteenth convocation started its constitutive session on 6 February 2024, at which the mandates of the elected members of the National Assembly were confirmed.[11] It continued on 18 March and lasted until 20 March.[12] During the constitutive session, the president of the National Assembly, vice-presidents of the National Assembly, general secretary of the National Assembly, and members of working bodies of the National Assembly were elected.[3][11] Members of permanent parliamentary delegations in international institutions were also elected.[3][11]
After MiloÅ¡ VuÄeviÄ was given the mandate to form a government by Aleksandar VuÄiÄ, the president of Serbia, the National Assembly elected him and his cabinet at a special session on 2 May.[13] The first extraordinary session of the fourteenth convocation began on 23 July.[14][15] The agenda of the session had 60 points.[14] During the session, BrnabiÄ issued a warning to Aleksandar JovanoviÄ Äuta.[16]
The second extraordinary session began on 23 September and ended on 30 September.[17][18] During the first session of the second regular session, BrnabiÄ and SNS MP NebojÅ¡a Bakarec used profanity against opposition members; Bakarec called Zdravko PonoÅ¡ an "UstaÅ¡a garbage" (Äubre jedno ustaÅ¡ko).[19][20] Kovács, who presided over the session that day, declined to censure Bakarec.[20] The official transcript from the session redacted Bakarec's profanity.[21]
A session on 4 March 2025 was interrupted, and 3 MPs were injured,[22] as opposition members threw flares in protest at a delay in the resignation of the Cabinet of MiloÅ¡ VuÄeviÄ.[23]
On 16 April 2025, the National Assembly elected the cabinet of Äuro Macut.[24]
Legislation
The law on local elections was amended on 23 April 2024 under an urgent procedure.[25] 165 voted in favour, while 26 voted against.[26] The law on the unified electoral roll was also amended, with 153 votes in favour, on 10 May.[27][28]
Members

The tables below lists all current and former members of the National Assembly during its fourteenth convocation.[29] The parliamentary group Party of Freedom and Justice (SSP)âMovement of Free Citizens (PSG) was dissolved on 10 April, after all three PSG MPs left the parliamentary group.[30] SSP then created its own parliamentary group, while PSG opted to continue without a parliamentary group.[31] In September 2024, PSG formed a parliamentary group with the Party of Democratic Action of Sandžak and the Party for Democratic Action.[32]
Aleksandar VuÄiÄ â Serbia Must Not Stop
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andrijana Aleksandrov | SNS | 1979 | ||
| Ivan AntiÄ | SNS | 1978 | ||
| Dragana ArsiÄ | SNS | 1983 | ||
| Veroljub ArsiÄ | SNS | 1969 | ||
| Marko AtlagiÄ | SNS | 1949 | ||
| Nebojša Bakarec | SNS | 1963 | ||
| Igor BeÄiÄ | SNS | 1971 | ||
| Ana MartaÄ Beloica | SNS | 1992 | ||
| Nikola Bokan | SNS | 1999 | ||
| Ana BrnabiÄ | SNS | 1975 | ||
| Dejan BulatoviÄ | SSD | 1975 | ||
| Aleksandar ÄotriÄ | SPO | 1966 | ||
| Tijana Davidovac | SNS | 1986 | ||
| Olivera DeniÄ | SNS | 1989 | ||
| Zoran DragiÅ¡iÄ | SNS | 1967 | ||
| Milovan Drecun | SNS | 1957 | ||
| Sanja DžajiÄ | SNS | 1989 | ||
| Vladimir ÄukanoviÄ | SNS | 1979 | ||
| Nevena ÄuriÄ | SNS | 1993 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Vesna ÄuriÅ¡iÄ | SNS | 1979 | ||
| Ninoslav EriÄ | SNS | 1976 | ||
| Dubravka Filipovski | SNS | 1967 | ||
| MiloÅ¡ GnjidiÄ | SNS | 1984 | ||
| Žika GojkoviÄ | SNS | 1972 | ||
| Uglješa Grgur | SNS | 1962 | ||
| Mladen GrujiÄ | SNS | 1966 | ||
| Dejan GureÅ¡iÄ | SNS | 1967 | ||
| Sonja IliÄ | SNS | 1981 | ||
| Biljana IliÄ StoÅ¡iÄ | SNS | 1964 | ||
| NataÅ¡a IvanoviÄ | SNS | 1978 | ||
| Lepomir IvkoviÄ | SNS | 1959 | ||
| Biljana JakovljeviÄ | SNS | 1988 | ||
| Igor D. JakÅ¡iÄ | SNS | 1968 | ||
| Tomislav JankoviÄ | SNS | 1973 | ||
| Stanislava JanoÅ¡eviÄ | SNS | 1986 | ||
| Branislav JosifoviÄ | SNS | 1991 | ||
| Milenko Jovanov | SNS | 1980 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Darko JovanoviÄ | SNS | 1977 | ||
| Dragan JovanoviÄ | SNS | 1972 | ||
| Jadranka JovanoviÄ | SNS | 1958 | ||
| NataÅ¡a JovanoviÄ | SNS | 1966 | ||
| Snežana JovanoviÄ | SNS | 1986 | ||
| Aleksandar JugoviÄ | SPO | 1975 | ||
| Stefan KitanoviÄ | SNS | 1992 | ||
| Jovan Kolundžija | SNS | 1948 | ||
| ÄorÄe Komlenski | PS | 1965 | ||
| Miroslav KondiÄ | SNS | 1980 | ||
| Nenad KrstiÄ | SNS | 1980 | ||
| Darko LaketiÄ | SNS | 1975 | ||
| Nikola LaziÄ | SNS | 1999 | ||
| Miodrag Linta | SNS | 1969 | ||
| Nada Macura | SNS | 1948 | ||
| DuÅ¡an MariÄ | SNS | 1963 | ||
| Aleksandar MarkoviÄ | SNS | 1981 | ||
| Veroljub MatiÄ | SNS | 1953 | ||
| NataÅ¡a MihajloviÄ | SNS | 1993 | ||
| Marko MilenkoviÄ | SNS | 1974 | ||
| Goran MiliÄ | SNS | 1982 | ||
| NataÅ¡a MiliÄ MilaÅ¡ | SNS | 1980 | ||
| Svetlana MiljiÄ | SNS | 1970 | ||
| Slobodan MilisavljeviÄ | SNS | 1965 | ||
| Ana MiljaniÄ | SNS | 1982 | ||
| Radoslav MilojiÄiÄ | SNS[a] | 1984 | ||
| Sanja MiloÅ¡eviÄ | SNS | 1996 | ||
| Aleksandar MirkoviÄ | SNS | 1988 | ||
| Marko MladenoviÄ | SNS | 1990 | ||
| Zdravko MladenoviÄ | SNS | 1977 | ||
| UgljeÅ¡a MrdiÄ | SNS | 1978 | ||
| Lidija NaÄiÄ | SNS | 1959 | ||
| Vesna NedoviÄ | SNS | 1966 | ||
| Anita NeÅ¡iÄ | SNS | 1979 | ||
| Dragan NikoliÄ | SNS | 1960 | ||
| Goran NikoliÄ | SNS | 1976 | ||
| Milica NikoliÄ | SNS | 1993 | ||
| Tatjana NikoliÄ | SNS | 1970 | ||
| Jasmina ObradoviÄ | SNS | 1961 | ||
| Jovan PalaliÄ | SNP | 1971 | ||
| Jasmina PaluroviÄ | SNS | 1972 | ||
| Nikola PanteliÄ | SNS | 1993 | ||
| Biljana PantiÄ Pilja | SNS | 1983 | ||
| Miroslav PetraÅ¡inoviÄ | SNS | 1985 | ||
| Olja PetroviÄ | SNS | 1990 | ||
| Tatjana PetroviÄ StojkoviÄ | SNS | 1966 | ||
| Stojan RadenoviÄ | SNS | 1948 | ||
| Milan Radin | SNS | 1988 | ||
| Dragana RadinoviÄ | SNS | 1976 | ||
| Nikola RadosavljeviÄ | SNS | 1975 | ||
| Marina Raguš | SNS | 1969 | ||
| Ivan RajiÄiÄ | SNS | 1987 | ||
| Goran RakiÄ | SNS | 1971 | ||
| Tanja RaÄenoviÄ | SNS | 1973 | ||
| Željko RebraÄa | SNS | 1972 | ||
| Marijan RistiÄeviÄ | NSS | 1958 | ||
| Nenad RistoviÄ | SNS | 1969 | ||
| Vesna SavoviÄ PetkoviÄ | SNS | 1973 | ||
| Goran SpasojeviÄ | SNS | 1968 | ||
| Dane StanojÄiÄ | SNS | 1979 | ||
| Katarina StojanoviÄ | SNS | 1989 | ||
| StaÅ¡a StojanoviÄ | SNS | 1991 | ||
| DuÅ¡an StojiljkoviÄ | SNS | 1982 | ||
| Vesna StankoviÄ | SNS | 1967 | ||
| Sanela StrainoviÄ | SNS | 1973 | ||
| Dailbor Å ÄekiÄ | SNS | 1979 | ||
| Dejan TomaÅ¡eviÄ | SNS | 1973 | ||
| Aleksandra TomiÄ | SNS | 1969 | ||
| Bojan Torbica | PS | 1965 | ||
| Radovan TvrdiÅ¡iÄ | SNS | 1971 | ||
| Nevena VeinoviÄ | SNS | 1996 | ||
| Ljubica Vraneš | SNS | 1979 | ||
| Milimir VujadinoviÄ | SNS | 1979 | ||
| Danijela VujiÄiÄ | SNS | 1978 | ||
| Marija ZdravkoviÄ | SNS | 1973 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[34] | ||||
New DSS â POKS (NADA)
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vladimir ÄorÄeviÄ | POKS | 1973 | ||
| Ljubinko ÄurkoviÄ | POKS | 1962 | ||
| Vladimir JeliÄ | POKS | 1977 | ||
| MiloÅ¡ JovanoviÄ | NDSS | 1976 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Predrag MarseniÄ | NDSS | 1970 | ||
| Vojislav MihailoviÄ | POKS | 1951 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| SlaÄana MiletiÄ | NDSS | 1972 | ||
| SlaÄana RadisaljeviÄ | NDSS | 1968 | ||
| DuÅ¡an RadosavljeviÄ | POKS | 1959 | ||
| Zoran SandiÄ | NDSS | 1970 | ||
| Zoran StojanoviÄ | NDSS | 1968 | ||
| Dejan Å ulkiÄ | NDSS | 1972 | ||
| Nenad TomaÅ¡eviÄ | POKS | 1971 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[35] | ||||
Ivica DaÄiÄ â Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS)
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aleksandar AntiÄ | SPS | 1969 | ||
| DuÅ¡an BajatoviÄ | SPS | 1967 | Parliamentary leader | |
| NataÅ¡a BogunoviÄ | SPS | 1973 | ||
| Sanja ÄaloviÄ | SPS | 1975 | ||
| Ivan KariÄ | Zeleni | 1975 | ||
| Mirka LukiÄ Å arkanoviÄ | SPS | 1968 | ||
| UgljeÅ¡a MarkoviÄ | SPS | 1991 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Marko MiloÅ¡eviÄ | SPS | 1999 | ||
| Aleksandra PavloviÄ MarkoviÄ | SPS | 1968 | ||
| Dijana RadoviÄ | SPS | 1989 | ||
| Branko RužiÄ | SPS | 1975 | ||
| Dunja SimonoviÄ BratiÄ | SPS | 1981 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[36] | ||||
People's Movement of Serbia â New Face of Serbia
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miroslav AleksiÄ | NPS | 1978 | Parliamentary leader | |
| UroÅ¡ ÄokiÄ | NPS | 1982 | ||
| Ana ErakoviÄ | NPS | 1985 | ||
| Aleksandar IvanoviÄ | NPS | 1982 | ||
| Ana JakovljeviÄ | NPS | 1981 | ||
| Nenad MilojiÄiÄ | NPS | 1978 | ||
| Dragan NinkoviÄ | NLS | 1975 | ||
| Borislav NovakoviÄ | NPS | 1964 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| MiloÅ¡ ParandiloviÄ | NLS | 1989 | ||
| Snežana RakiÄ | NPS | 1961 | ||
| Ivana RokviÄ | NPS | 1977 | ||
| ÄorÄe StankoviÄ | NPS | 1989 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[37] | ||||
Party of Freedom and Justice
In October 2024, Željko VeselinoviÄ and ÄorÄe ÄorÄiÄ left the SSP parliamentary group.[38] They were followed by Sonja Pernat and Irena ŽivkoviÄ; VeselinoviÄ announced the formation of the Workers' Party before 2025.[39]
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dragan Äilas | SSP | 1967 | ||
| Dalibor JekiÄ | SSP | 1977 | ||
| Branko Miljuš | SSP | 1972 | ||
| Jelena MiloÅ¡eviÄ | SSP | 1988 | ||
| PeÄa MitroviÄ | SSP | 1988 | ||
| DuÅ¡an NikeziÄ | SSP | 1973 | ||
| Tatjana PaÅ¡iÄ | SSP | 1964 | ||
| Goran PetroviÄ | SSP | 1966 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Mila PopoviÄ | SSP | 1978 | ||
| Jelena SpiriÄ | SSP | 1982 | ||
| Borko StefanoviÄ | SSP | 1974 | ||
| Marinika TepiÄ | SSP | 1974 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[40] | ||||
GreenâLeft Front â Do not let Belgrade drown
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rastislav DiniÄ | ZLF | 1978 | ||
| Biljana ÄorÄeviÄ | ZLF | 1984 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Jelena JeriniÄ | ZLF | 1978 | ||
| Robet Kozma | ZLF | 1983 | ||
| Radomir LazoviÄ | ZLF | 1980 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Marina MijatoviÄ | ZLF | 1976 | ||
| ÄorÄe PaviÄeviÄ | ZLF | 1966 | ||
| Bogdan RadovanoviÄ | ZLF | 1989 | ||
| Natalija StojmenoviÄ | ZLF | 1995 | ||
| Dobrica VeselinoviÄ | ZLF | 1981 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[41] | ||||
Serbia Centre â SRCE
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slobodan CvejiÄ | SRCE | 1965 | ||
| Dragan DeliÄ | SRCE | 1953 | ||
| Slobodan IliÄ | SRCE | 1978 | ||
| Stefan JanjiÄ | SRCE | 1987 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Tatjana MarkoviÄ TopaloviÄ | SRCE | 1969 | ||
| Verica MilanoviÄ | SRCE | 1969 | ||
| Tijana PeriÄ Diligenski | SRCE | 1986 | ||
| Slobodan PetroviÄ | SRCE | 1990 | ||
| Zdravko Ponoš | SRCE | 1962 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[42] | ||||
Democratic Party â DS
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zoran Lutovac | DS | 1964 | ||
| Ksenija MarkoviÄ | DS | 1986 | ||
| SrÄan MilivojeviÄ | DS | 1965 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Nenad MitroviÄ | DS | 1970 | ||
| NebojÅ¡a NovakoviÄ | DS | 1984 | ||
| Dragana RakiÄ | DS | 1973 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Dragana RaÅ¡iÄ | DS | 1984 | ||
| Filip TataloviÄ | DS | 1981 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[43] | ||||
We â Strength from the People
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jovan JanjiÄ | MIâGIN | 1963 | ||
| Mitar KovaÄ | MIâGIN | 1959 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Ana KrstiÄ | MIâGIN | 1986 | ||
| SiniÅ¡a LjepojeviÄ | MIâGIN | 1956 | ||
| Branko PavloviÄ | MIâGIN | 1960 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Dragan StanojeviÄ | MIâGIN | 1971 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[44] | ||||
PSGâSDA of SandžakâPDD
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pavle GrboviÄ | PSG | 1993 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Minela Kalender | SDAS | 1984 | ||
| Shaip Kamberi | PVD/PDD | 1964 | ||
| Anna Oreg | PSG | 1985 | ||
| Vladimir PajiÄ | PSG | 1989 | ||
| Ahmedin Å krijelj | SDAS | 1982 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[45] | ||||
PUPS â Solidarity and Justice
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aleksandar ÄukiÄ | PUPS | 1997 | ||
| Risto Kostov | PUPS | 1954 | ||
| Stefan KrkobabiÄ | PUPS | 1989 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Dragan M. MarkoviÄ | PUPS | 1965 | ||
| Ilo Mihajlovski | PUPS | 1960 | ||
| Milorad StoÅ¡iÄ | PUPS | 1954 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[46] | ||||
Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boris BajiÄ | VMSZ/SVM | 1982 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Elvira Kovács | VMSZ/SVM | 1982 | ||
| Bálint Pásztor | VMSZ/SVM | 1979 | Parliamentary leader | |
| József Tóbiás | VMSZ/SVM | 1971 | ||
| Ãkos Ãjhelyi | VMSZ/SVM | 1977 | ||
| Emese Ãri | VMSZ/SVM | 1967 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[47] | ||||
Social Democratic Party of Serbia
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Muamer BaÄevac | SDPS | 1977 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Edis DurgutoviÄ | SDPS | 1983 | ||
| Sanja JefiÄ BrankoviÄ | SDPS | 1984 | ||
| Branimir JovanoviÄ | SDPS | 1979 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Jasmina Karanac | SDPS | 1967 | ||
| SlaÄana Å uÅ¡njar | SDPS | 1975 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[48] | ||||
Dragan MarkoviÄ Palma â United Serbia
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zagorka AleksiÄ | JS | 1987 | ||
| Nenad FilipoviÄ | JS | 1972 | ||
| Marija JevÄiÄ | JS | 1981 | ||
| Života StarÄeviÄ | JS | 1968 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Vojislav VujiÄ | JS | 1975 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[49] | ||||
Ecological Uprising
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dragan JoniÄ | EU | 1966 | ||
| Aleksandar JovanoviÄ Äuta | EU | 1966 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Milica MaruÅ¡iÄ JablanoviÄ | EU | 1983 | ||
| Danijela NestoroviÄ | EU | 1974 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Goran PetkoviÄ | EU | 1963 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[45] | ||||
We â Power of the People prof dr Branimir NestoroviÄ
The group was known "We â Strength from the People prof dr Branimir NestoroviÄ" until April 2024.[50]
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Borislav AntonijeviÄ | MIâSN | 1967 | ||
| Ana IvanoviÄ | MIâSN | 1971 | ||
| Branko LukiÄ | MIâSN | 1959 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Branimir NestoroviÄ | MIâSN | 1954 | ||
| Aleksandar PaviÄ | MIâSN | 1961 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[51] | ||||
Workers' Movement Sloga â Experts
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ÄorÄo ÄorÄiÄ | Independent[b] | 1978 | ||
| Sonja Pernat | Independent[c] | 1976 | ||
| Slavica RadovanoviÄ | NovaâD2SP[d] | 1966 | Parliamentary deputy leader | |
| Željko VeselinoviÄ | USS Sloga[e] | 1974 | Parliamentary leader | |
| Irena ŽivkoviÄ | Independent[f] | 1979 | ||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[54] | ||||
Members without a parliamentary group
| Name | Political party | Year of birth | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Miloljub AlbijaniÄ | ZS | 1967 | |
| Radomir BojoviÄ | ZS | 1962 | |
| Igor BraunoviÄ | Independent[g] | 1975 | |
| Edin Äerlek | SPP | 1987 | |
| Bogdana KoljeviÄ Griffith | Independent[h] | 1979 | |
| Milija MiletiÄ | USS | 1968 | |
| Slobodan NikoliÄ | RS | 1957 | |
| Edin NumanoviÄ | SPP | 1994 | |
| Jelena PavloviÄ | Independent[i] | 1976 | |
| Žarko RistiÄ | Independent[j] | 1980 | |
| Ivana StamatoviÄ | ZS | 1991 | |
| Lidija Å arac | SNP | 1958 | |
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[59] | |||
Former members
| Name | Political party | Parliamentary group | Year of birth | Term length | Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slavica Å krbiÄ | POKS | NADA | 1980 | 6 February 2024 | |||
| Marija VojinoviÄ | POKS | NADA | 1980 | 6 February 2024 | Resigned | ||
| Predrag BandiÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1968 | 6 Februaryâ27 March 2024 | Resigned, later served in the government of Serbia | ||
| Nikola SelakoviÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1983 | 6 Februaryâ27 March 2024 | Resigned, later served in the government of Serbia | ||
| MiloÅ¡ VuÄeviÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1974 | 6 Februaryâ27 March 2024 | Resigned, later became prime minister of Serbia | ||
| Nastasja BakoviÄ | NLS | NPSâNLS | 1999 | 6 Februaryâ17 April 2024 | |||
| Milan KrkobabiÄ | PUPS | PUPS â Solidarity and Justice | 1952 | 6 Februaryâ30 April 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Ivica DaÄiÄ | SPS | SPSâZeleni | 1966 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Slavica ÄukiÄ DejanoviÄ | SPS | SPSâZeleni | 1951 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Arno Gujon | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1985 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Zlatibor LonÄar | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1971 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Tatjana Macura | Independent | AVâSNSDS | 1981 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| ÄorÄe MiliÄeviÄ | SPS | SPSâZeleni | 1978 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Petar PetkoviÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1980 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Dejan RistiÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1972 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Novica TonÄev | SPS | SPSâZeleni | 1962 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Usame ZukorliÄ | SPP | Members without a parliamentary group | 1992 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Jelena ŽariÄ KovaÄeviÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1981 | 6 Februaryâ1 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Sandra BožiÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1979 | 6 Februaryâ7 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Vojvodina | ||
| Vladimir OrliÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1979 | 6 Februaryâ13 June 2024 | Resigned to serve as director of the Security Intelligence Agency | ||
| Rejhan KurtoviÄ | SPP | Members without a parliamentary group | 1986 | 1â20 May 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Ivana NikoliÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1989 | 6 Februaryâ10 June 2024 | Resigned to serve as deputy mayor of Ub | ||
| Sabira HadžiavdiÄ | SPP | Members without a parliamentary group | 1975 | 23 July 2024 | Resigned | ||
| Jelena BogdanoviÄ | POKS | NADA | 1988 | 1 Mayâ24 July 2024 | |||
| Selma KuÄeviÄ | SDAS | Members without a parliamentary group | 1991 | 6 Februaryâ6 August 2024 | Resigned to serve as mayor of Tutin | ||
| Mirza HajdinoviÄ | SDAS | Members without a parliamentary group | 1977 | 24 September 2024 | Resigned at the direction of the SDAS leadership | ||
| Dragana LukiÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1988 | 6 Februaryâ8 November 2024 | Resigned to serve as mayor of Loznica | ||
| Dragan MarkoviÄ | JS | JS | 1960 | 6 Februaryâ22 November 2024 | Died[60] | ||
| Vladan ZagraÄanin | SPS | SPSâZeleni | 1968 | 6 Februaryâ25 November 2024 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Živan BajiÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1982 | 6 February 2024â22 January 2025 | |||
| Branko VujkoviÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1979 | 1 March 2024â22 January 2025 | |||
| Snežana PaunoviÄ | SPS | SPSâZeleni | 1975 | 6 February 2024â15 April 2025 | Resigned to serve in the government of Serbia | ||
| Aleksandra PavloviÄ MarkoviÄ | SPS | SPSâZeleni | 1968 | 27 November 2024â17 April 2025 | |||
| Ninoslav EriÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1976 | 5 March 2025â11 March 2025 | |||
| Aleksandar AntiÄ | SPS | SPSâZeleni | 1969 | 1 May 2024â17 April 2025 | |||
| Tijana PeriÄ Diligenski | SRCE | SRCE | 1986 | 6 February 2024â1 July 2025 | |||
| Dejan TomaÅ¡eviÄ | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1973 | 6 February 2024â3 December 2025 | Resigned to serve as the president of the Olympic Committee of Serbia[61] | ||
| Milan GluÅ¡ac | SNS | AVâSNSDS | 1977 | 17 December 2025â17 December 2025 | |||
| Source: National Assembly of Serbia[5] | |||||||
Notes
- Initially the president of the Serbian Left at the beginning of the 14th convocation, MilojiÄiÄ joined SNS in June 2024.[33]
- RadovanoviÄ was a member of NPS and its parliamentary group until 20 November 2024.[52] She subsequently joined the New PartyâExperts Should Have A Say.[53]