Prime Minister of Yugoslavia

Prime Minister of Yugoslavia
Премијер ЈугославијеPremijer Jugoslavije
Longest servingJosip Broz Tito29 November 1943 – 29 June 1963
Government of Yugoslavia
Member ofParliament of Yugoslavia
Reports toKing of Yugoslavia (Serbs, Croats and Slovenes) (1918–1945)President of Yugoslavia (1945–1971)Presidency of Yugoslavia (1971–1992)
SeatBelgrade, Serbia
NominatorKing of Yugoslavia (Serbs, Croats and Slovenes) (1918–1945)Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (1945–1992)
AppointerParliament of Yugoslavia
PrecursorPrime Minister of SerbiaPresident of the National Council of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs
Formation1 December 1918 (1918-12-01)
First holderStojan Protić
Final holderAnte Marković
Abolished14 July 1992 (1992-07-14)
Superseded byPrime Minister of Bosnia and HerzegovinaPrime Minister of CroatiaPrime Minister of North MacedoniaPrime Minister of Serbia and MontenegroPrime Minister of Slovenia
DeputyDeputy Prime Minister of Yugoslavia

The prime minister of Yugoslavia (Serbo-Croatian: Премијер Југославије, Premijer Jugoslavije) was the head of government of the Yugoslav state, from the creation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in 1918 until the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992.

History

Kingdom of Yugoslavia

The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was created by the unification of the Kingdom of Serbia (Montenegro had united with Serbia five days previously, while the regions of Kosovo and Metohija, Baranya, Syrmia, Banat, Bačka and Vardar Macedonia were parts of Serbia prior to the unification) and the provisional State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs (itself formed from territories of the former Austria-Hungary) on 1 December 1918.

Until 6 January 1929, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was a parliamentary monarchy. On that day, King Alexander I abolished the Vidovdan Constitution (adopted in 1921), prorogued the National Assembly and introduced a personal dictatorship (so-called 6 January Dictatorship).[1] He renamed the country Kingdom of Yugoslavia on 3 October 1929, and although introduced the 1931 Constitution, he continued to rule as a de factoabsolute monarch until his assassination on 9 October 1934, during a state visit to France. After his assassination, parliamentary monarchy was put back in place.

The Kingdom of Yugoslavia was defeated and occupied on 17 April 1941 after the German invasion. The monarchy was formally abolished and the republic proclaimed on 29 November 1945.

SFR Yugoslavia

After the German invasion and fragmentation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the Partisan resistance in occupied Yugoslavia formed a deliberative council, the Anti-Fascist Council of National Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ) in 1942. On 29 November 1943 the AVNOJ proclaimed the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia, and appointed the National Committee for the Liberation of Yugoslavia (NKOJ), led by Prime Minister Josip Broz Tito, as its government. Josip Broz Tito was quickly recognized by the Allies at the Tehran Conference, and the royalist government-in-exile in London was pressured into agreeing on a merge with the NKOJ. In order to facilitate this, Ivan Šubašić was appointed by the King to head the London government.

For a period, Yugoslavia had two recognized prime ministers and governments (which both agreed to formally merge as soon as possible): Josip Broz Tito leading the NKOJ in occupied Yugoslavia, and Ivan Šubašić leading the King's government-in-exile in London. With the Tito-Šubašić Agreement in 1944, the two prime ministers agreed that the new joint government would be led by Tito. After the liberation of Yugoslavia's capital Belgrade in October 1944, the joint government was officially formed on 2 November 1944, with Josip Broz Tito as the prime minister.

After the war, elections were held ending in an overwhelming victory for Tito's People's Front. The new parliament deposed King Peter II on 29 November 1945, and declared a Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (in 1963, the state was renamed Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia). The government was first headed by a prime minister up to 14 January 1953, when major decentralization reforms reorganized the government into the Federal Executive Council chaired by a President, who was still usually called "Prime Minister" in non-Yugoslav sources. Josip Broz Tito held the post from 1944 to 1963; from 1953 onward, he was also President of the Republic.

Five out of nine heads of government of Yugoslavia in this period were of Croatian ethnicity. Three were from Croatia itself (Josip Broz Tito, Mika Špiljak, and Milka Planinc), while two were Bosnian Croats (Branko Mikulić and Ante Marković). Ante Marković however, though a Croat from Bosnia and Herzegovina by birth, was a politician of Croatia like Špiljak and Planinc, serving (at different times) as both prime minister and president of the presidency of that federal unit.

List

  Denotes an acting prime minister
No.Portrait Name(Birth–Death)Ethnicity Term of office Party Election Cabinet Notes
Took office Left office Time in office
In the Kingdom of Yugoslavia
N/ANikola PašićНикола Пашић(1845–1926)Serb1 December 1918 22 December 1918 21 days People's Radical PartyPašić XII Acting prime minister, as the last prime minister of Serbia.
1 Stojan ProtićСтојан Протић(1857–1923)Serb22 December 1918 16 August 1919 237 days People's Radical PartyProtić I First Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (that will be renamed to "Yugoslavia").
2 Ljubomir DavidovićЉубомир Давидовић(1863–1940)Serb16 August 1919 19 February 1920 187 days Democratic PartyDavidović I
(1) Stojan ProtićСтојан Протић(1857–1923)Serb19 February 1920 16 May 1920 87 days People's Radical PartyProtić II
3 Milenko VesnićМиленко Веснић(1863–1921)Serb16 May 1920 1 January 1921 230 days People's Radical Party1920Vesnić
4 Nikola PašićНикола Пашић(1845–1926)Serb1 January 1921 28 July 1924 3 years, 209 days People's Radical Party1923Pašić XIII–XIV–XV–XVI–XVII–XVIII–XIX Second term.Vidovdan Constitution adopted on 28 June 1921.
(2) Ljubomir DavidovićЉубомир Давидовић(1863–1940)Serb28 July 1924 6 November 1924 101 days Democratic PartyDavidović II Second term
(4) Nikola PašićНикола Пашић(1845–1926)Serb6 November 1924 8 April 1926 1 year, 153 days People's Radical Party1925Pašić XX–XXI–XXII Third term
5 Nikola UzunovićНикола Узуновић(1873–1954)Serb8 April 1926 17 April 1927 1 year, 9 days People's Radical PartyUzunović I–II
6 Velimir VukićevićВелимир Вукићевић(1871–1930)Serb17 April 1927 28 July 1928 1 year, 102 days People's Radical Party1927Vukićević I–II Resigned after assassination attempt on opposition leader Stjepan Radić in the Parliament.
7 Anton KorošecАнтон Корошец(1872–1940)Slovene28 July 1928 7 January 1929[1]163 days Slovene People's PartyKorošec Dismissed when the 6 January Dictatorship was proclaimed.
8 Petar ŽivkovićПетар Живковић(1879–1947)Serb7 January 1929[1]4 April 1932 3 years, 88 days Yugoslav Radical Peasants' Democracy1931Živković Prime Minister during the 6 January Dictatorship.Sentenced to death in absentia in 1946.
9 Vojislav MarinkovićВојислав Маринковић(1876–1935)Serb4 April 1932 3 July 1932 90 days Yugoslav Radical Peasants' DemocracyMarinković Previously a (founding) member of the Democratic Party.
10 Milan SrškićМилан Сршкић(1880–1937)Serb3 July 1932 27 January 1934 1 year, 208 days Yugoslav Radical Peasants' DemocracySrškić I–II
(5) Nikola UzunovićНикола Узуновић(1873–1954)Serb27 January 1934 22 December 1934 329 days Yugoslav National PartyUzunović III The Yugoslav Radical Peasants' Democracy party was renamed into the Yugoslav National Party.
11 Bogoljub JevtićБогољуб Јевтић(1886–1960)Serb22 December 1934 24 June 1935 184 days Yugoslav National Party1935Jevtić
Yugoslav Radical Union
12 Milan StojadinovićМилан Стојадиновић(1888–1961)Serb24 June 1935 5 February 1939 3 years, 226 days Yugoslav Radical Union1938Stojadinović I–II–III
13 Dragiša CvetkovićДрагиша Цветковић(1893–1969)Serb5 February 1939 27 March 1941 2 years, 50 days Yugoslav Radical UnionCvetković I–II Sentenced in absentia in 1945.[2]
In the Yugoslav government-in-exile
14 Dušan SimovićДушан Симовић(1882–1962)Serb27 March 1941 11 January 1942 290 days IndependentSimovićChief of the General Staff of the Royal Yugoslav Army. Took power by military coup d'état. He led government into exile in London.
15 Slobodan JovanovićСлободан Јовановић(1869–1958)Serb11 January 1942 26 June 1943 1 year, 166 days IndependentJovanović I-II Headed government-in-exile.Found guilty of treason in absentia in 1946.
16 Miloš TrifunovićМилош Трифуновић(1871–1957)Serb26 June 1943 10 August 1943 45 days People's Radical PartyTrifunovićHeaded government-in-exile
17 Božidar PurićБожидар Пурић(1891–1977)Serb10 August 1943 8 July 1944 333 days IndependentPurićHeaded government-in-exile
18 Ivan ŠubašićИван Шубашић(1892–1955)Croat8 July 1944 7 March 1945 242 days Croatian Peasant PartyŠubašićHeaded government-in-exile.Merged into coalition government on November 2, 1944, with Josip Broz Tito presiding.[3][4]
In the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia/Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
19(1)Josip Broz TitoЈосип Броз Тито(1892–1980)Croat29 November 1943 29 June 1963 19 years, 212 days Communist Party of Yugoslavia19451950195319581963Tito IIIIII–IV–V–VI Held post simultaneously (as head of the NKOJ) first with Božidar Purić, then Ivan Šubašić. Headed joint coalition government.
League of Communists of Yugoslavia
20(2)Petar StambolićПетар Стамболић(1912–2007)Serb29 June 1963 16 May 1967 3 years, 321 days League of Communists of YugoslaviaStambolić
21(3)Mika ŠpiljakМика Шпиљак(1916–2007)Croat16 May 1967 18 May 1969 2 years, 2 days League of Communists of YugoslaviaŠpiljak
22(4)Mitja RibičičМитја Рибичич(1919–2013)Slovene18 May 1969 30 July 1971 2 years, 73 days League of Communists of Yugoslavia1969Ribičič
23(5)Džemal BijedićЏемал Биједић(1917–1977)Bosniak30 July 1971 18 January 1977 5 years, 172 days League of Communists of Yugoslavia1974Bijedić I-IIKilled in a plane crash.[5]
24(6)Veselin ĐuranovićВеселин Ђурановић(1925–1997)Montenegrin18 January 1977[6]16 May 1982 5 years, 118 days League of Communists of Yugoslavia1978Đuranović
25(7)Milka PlanincМилка Планинц(1924–2010)Croat16 May 1982 15 May 1986 3 years, 364 days League of Communists of Yugoslavia1982PlanincFirst female head of the government.
26(8)Branko MikulićБранко Микулић(1928–1994)Croat15 May 1986 16 March 1989 2 years, 305 days League of Communists of Yugoslavia1986Mikulić Resigned on 30 December 1988, amid widespread protests.
27(9)Ante MarkovićАнте Марковић(1924–2011)Croat16 March 1989 20 December 1991 2 years, 279 days League of Communists of Yugoslavia1989 Marković Last prime minister of Yugoslavia.League of Communists was dissolved in 1990, Marković formed his own party.
Union of Reform Forces of Yugoslavia
N/AAleksandar MitrovićАлександар Митровић(1933–2012)Serb20 December 1991 14 July 1992 207 days Socialist Party of SerbiaMarković Acting prime minister.Installed by Serbia and Montenegro.

Timeline

Aleksandar Mitrović (politician)Ante MarkovićBranko MikulićMilka PlanincVeselin ĐuranovićDžemal BijedićMitja RibičičMika ŠpiljakPetar StambolićJosip Broz TitoIvan ŠubašićBožidar PurićMiloš Trifunović (politician)Slobodan JovanovićDušan SimovićDragiša CvetkovićMilan StojadinovićBogoljub JevtićMilan SrškićVojislav MarinkovićPetar ŽivkovićAnton KorošecVelimir VukićevićNikola UzunovićMilenko VesnićLjubomir DavidovićStojan ProtićNikola Pašić

See also

References

  1. ^ abcEdwin Leland James (7 January 1929). "KING OF YUGOSLAVIA ASSUMES ALL POWER". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  2. ^Rehabilitovan Dragiša Cvetković
  3. ^Lampe, John R.; Yugoslavia as history: twice there was a country; Cambridge University Press, 2000 ISBN 0-521-77401-2
  4. ^Ramet, Sabrina P.; The three Yugoslavias: state-building and legitimation, 1918-2005; Indiana University Press, 2006 ISBN 0-253-34656-8
  5. ^Malcolm Browne (19 January 1977). "Bijedic, Yugoslav Prime Minister, Is Killed in Crash of Executive Jet". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 August 2021.
  6. ^"Montenegrin Is Appointed Premier of Yugoslavia". The New York Times. 16 March 1977. Retrieved 13 August 2021.