Predrag Stojanović
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Predrag Stojanović (Serbian Cyrillic: Предраг Стојановић; born 3 April 1958) is a Serbian academic and former politician. He served in the National Assembly of Serbia from 2001 to 2004 as a member of the Christian Democratic Party of Serbia (Demohrišćanska Stranka Srbije, DHSS) and has held high political office in Kraljevo.
In 2007, Stojanović was charged in relation to the "Indeks" scandal, in which a number of University of Kragujevac law professors were accused of taking part in a grades-for-payment scheme. The case against him is still active as of 2022, and no verdict has yet been issued. He has denied the charges.
Stojanović was born in Kraljevo, in what was then the People's Republic of Serbia in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. He graduated with a bachelor's degree from the University of Kragujevac Faculty of Law in 1980 and later earned a master's degree and Ph.D from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law (both 1984). He began working at the University of Kragujevac as a trainee assistant in 1981 and ultimately became a full professor in 2000.[1]
Politician
Democratic Party of Serbia
Stojanović was an opponent of Slobodan Milošević's administration in the 1990s and became politically active as a member of the Democratic Party of Serbia (Demokratska stranka Srbije, DSS). The DSS contested the 1996 Serbian local elections in Kraljevo in conjunction with the opposition Zajedno alliance, which won a narrow majority victory in the city.[2] Stojanović was among the Zajedno candidates elected and was chosen in February 1997 as vice-president of the local assembly, a position that was at the time equivalent to deputy mayor.[3]
The DSS experienced a serious split in 1997, largely over the extent of its ongoing cooperation with Zajedno. A group led by Vladan Batić supported closer co-operation and left the party to form the Christian Democratic Party of Serbia; Stojanović sided with Batić and joined the new party. Ironically, the Zajedno alliance was itself falling apart at the republic level at around the same time.[4][5]
Christian Democratic Party of Serbia
In 2000, the DHSS joined the Democratic Opposition of Serbia (Demokratska opozicija Srbije, DOS), a broad and ideologically diverse coalition of parties opposed to the Milošević administration. DOS leader Vojislav Koštunica defeated Milošević in the 2000 Yugoslavian presidential election, a watershed moment in Serbian and Yugoslavian politics. The Serbian government fell after Milošević's defeat in the Yugoslavian election, and a new Serbian parliamentary election was called for December 2000. Prior to the election, Serbia's electoral laws were reformed such that all mandates were awarded to candidates on successful lists at the discretion of the sponsoring parties or coalitions, irrespective of numerical order.[6] Stojanović received the sixth position on the DHSS's electoral list and was given a mandate when the list won a landslide majority victory with 176 out of 250 seats.[7][8]
In parliament, Stojanović was the president of the education committee and a member of the finance committee, the foreign affairs committee, and the justice and administration committee.[9] He was elected as a DHSS vice-president in December 2000 and re-elected to the same role in December 2002.[10][11] A vocal opponent of communism, he brought forward legislation in September 2003 to open state security files from the years when Serbia was a one-party socialist state.[12]
The Serbian government dissolved the Kraljevo municipal assembly in July 2003 following a period of instability and called new mayoral and assembly elections for November of the same year. Stojanović ran as the DHSS's candidate in the mayoral contest and was defeated in the first round of voting, finishing in eighth place. The DHSS won five seats in the local assembly and participated in a coalition government after the election; Stojanović was not himself a member of the government but was generally responsible for co-ordinating the party's local activities.[13][14]
The DHSS contested the 2003 parliamentary election at the head of the Independent Serbia (Samostalna Srbija) alliance. Stojanović appeared in the seventh position on its electoral list, which did not cross the electoral threshold to win assembly representation; his term ended when the new assembly convened in January 2004.[15]
For the 2007 parliamentary election, the DHSS participated in a coalition led by the Liberal Democratic Party (Liberalno demokratska partija, LDP), and Stojanović received the 221st position on a list that was mostly alphabetical.[16] The list won fifteen seats; by virtue of a pre-election arrangement, the DHSS received only one mandate, which was assigned to party leader Vladan Batić.