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This is a list of prime ministers of Croatia since the first multi-party elections in 1990. These Prime Ministers served within the Socialist Republic of Croatia, a constituent republic of Yugoslavia, and after independence in 1991, the Republic of Croatia. The Prime Ministers are ranked by the length of their combined terms in office.
Prime ministers
editPolitical parties: Croatian Democratic Union Social Democratic Party Independent
Prime Minister | Incumbency | Years in power | Number of mandates | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Andrej Plenković (incumbent) | 8 years, 33 days | 2016–present | 1 minority | Plenković served one full term and is currently serving a second term. He has headed two cabinets, with both of them being minority coalition governments (2016–2020 and since 2020). Plenković is the longest-serving prime minister of Croatia. |
2 |
Ivo Sanader | 5 years, 195 days | 2003–2009 | 2 minority & 1 majority | Sanader served one full term at the head of a minority government and one short term as the head of a majority government. He resigned during his second term. Jadranka Kosor served out the remainder of his second term. |
3 |
Zlatko Mateša | 4 years, 81 days | 1995–2000 | 1 majority | Mateša served one full term. His cabinet has the single longest duration of any Croatian government since first multi-party elections in 1990. |
4 |
Zoran Milanović | 4 years, 30 days | 2011–2016 | 1 majority | Milanović served one full term heading a majority coalition government. |
5 |
Ivica Račan | 3 years, 330 days | 2000–2003 | 2 majority | Račan served one full term. He headed two cabinets: at first a six-party majority coalition (2000–2002) and then a five-party majority coalition (2002–2003). |
6 |
Nikica Valentić | 2 years, 218 days | 1993–1995 | none | Valentić served out the term of Hrvoje Šarinić. He never won an election in his own right. |
7 |
Jadranka Kosor | 2 years, 170 days | 2009–2011 | none | Jadranka Kosor served out the remainder of Ivo Sanader's second term. She never won an election in her own right. |
8 |
Franjo Gregurić | 1 year, 26 days | 1991–1992 | none | Gregurić was the second of two Prime Ministers to serve out the term of Stjepan Mesić. He headed a National Unity Government at the beginning of the Croatian War of Independence and had the parliamentary support of almost all parties. He never won an election in his own right. |
9 |
Josip Manolić | 327 days | 1990–1991 | none | Manolić was the first of two Prime Ministers to serve out the remainder of the term of Stjepan Mesić, who had resigned to take up a seat in the Federal Presidency (Croatia did not formally declared independence until 25 June 1991). Manolić never won an election in his own right. He was succeeded by Franjo Gregurić. |
10 |
Tihomir Orešković | 271 days | 2016 | 1 minority | Orešković served one short full term heading a minority coalition government. |
11 |
Hrvoje Šarinić | 234 days | 1992–1993 | 1 majority | Šarinić served one term heading a majority government. Nikica Valentić served out the remainder of the term until the next election. |
12 |
Stjepan Mesić | 86 days | 1990 | 1 majority | Mesić served one short term. He was elected Prime Minister by Parliament following the first multi-party election in 1990 (when Croatia was still part of Yugoslavia) and resigned to take up SR Croatia's seat in the Federal Presidency of Yugoslavia in Belgrade. The remaining 2 years of his term were served out by Josip Manolić and Franjo Gregurić. |
Prime ministers' parties by total time in office (since the 1990 elections)
edit- Croatian Democratic Union — 24 years, 316 days or 9080 days (as of 31 December 2023)
- Social Democratic Party of Croatia — 7 years, 360 days or 2917 days
Periods of continuous government by prime ministers' parties since 1990
edit- Croatian Democratic Union — 30 May 1990 – 27 January 2000 (9 years, 242 days or 3529 days)
- Social Democratic Party of Croatia — 27 January 2000 – 23 December 2003 (3 years, 330 days or 1426 days)
- Croatian Democratic Union — 23 December 2003 – 23 December 2011 (8 years, 0 days or 2922 days)
- Social Democratic Party of Croatia — 23 December 2011 – 22 January 2016 (4 years, 30 days or 1491 days)
- Non-partisan Prime Minister — 22 January 2016 – 19 October 2016
- Croatian Democratic Union — 19 October 2016 – present (8 years, 33 days or 2955 days)
Incumbent Prime Minister
editAndrej Plenković took office as prime minister on 19 October 2016. On 4 May 2022, he surpassed the tenure of Ivo Sanader (5 years, 195 days) and became the longest-serving prime minister of Croatia since the first multi-party elections in 1990 and independence on 25 June 1991.[1][2][3]
If he were to continuously hold the office until:
- 25 June 2025, he would break the record held by Vladimir Bakarić (8 years, 248 days) as President of the Government and President of the Executive Council of the People's Republic of Croatia and become the longest-serving head of any Croatian cabinet since World War II
- 11 February 2035, he would break the record currently held by Josip Broz Tito (18 years, 115 days) as Prime Minister of Yugoslavia and become the longest-serving head of any government that ruled over Croatia since World War II
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ ""Plenković najdugovječniji premijer zbog tehnologije vladanja infiltracijom"". 29 April 2022.
- ^ Krnićaccess-date=2022-05-08, Hana (2022-04-30). "Plenković postao najdugovječniji premijer i nadmašio Sanadera; a rejting mu ne pada". Archived from the original on 2022-05-08.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Jutarnji list - HDZ-ovci ne trče u Vladu, slijedi li sada outsourcing?". 21 April 2022.