Serbia
Parliamentary
May 11 2008
Description of Electoral System:
(courtesy of IFES election guide)
The President is elected by popular vote to serve a 5-year term.
In the National Assembly 250 members are elected by direct vote to serve 4-year terms.
Electoral Systems Snapshot
(Courtesy of International IDEA)
*Click on links for definitions
| Electoral System for National Legislature | List PR |
| Type | - |
| Tiers | |
| Legislature Size (Directly elected, voting members) | 126, 126 |
| Electoral System for President | - |
WANT MORE ELECTION RELATED STATS FOR SERBIA? Go to "election databases" on the left-hand menu of this page OR comparative data on the right-hand menu and choose your area of interest.
Country overview
Serbia became a stand-alone sovereign republic in summer 2006 after Montenegro voted in a referendum for independence from the Union of Serbia and Montenegro. When the vote was followed by a formal declaration of independence by Montenegro, a special session of parliament in Belgrade declared Serbia to be the legal successor to the now defunct union of Serbia and Montenegro.
Recent elections
Presidential elections - 2008
First round of the Serbia presidential elections was held on 20 January, two weeks later (3 February) the second round was successfully conducted. For official results, please click here. OSCE-ODIHR press statement and documents are available here.
Parliamentary elections - 2008
According to preliminary results the pro-Western alliance led by President Boris Tadic won Sunday's
parliamentary elections - 11 May 2008. According to projected election results reported by
an independent monitoring group, the Centre for Free Elections and Democracy,
Mr Tadic's Democratic Party and its allies gained 38.7 percent of the votes and
secured 103 out of 250 seats in the country's parliament - not enough to form a
coalition on his own. Details are here. For preliminary results, please click here and for voterturnout here.

Serbia: Questions and answers about the 2007 election
