Aleksandar Kravić


Aleksandar Kravić, also known by the stage name Caki, is a politician and musician in Serbia. He was the bassist in Đorđe Balašević's band for several years and subsequently became a prominent member of the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina, serving in government at the provincial and municipal levels.

Early life, private career, and music career

Kravić was born in Novi Sad, Autonomous Province of Vojvodina, in what was then the People's Republic of Serbia in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. He attended the Svetozar Marković Toza elementary school and the Svetozar Marković secondary school, and learned the guitar at the KUD Svetozar Marković. He is a graduate of the University of Novi Sad Faculty of Law and has worked as a journalist for Radio Television Novi Sad.
He became an established bassist in Novi Sad in the mid-1970s, working with the Kvintet Voje Brkovića and initially playing in a jazz rock style influenced by Miles Davis and John McLaughlin. He was later a member of the prominent punk and new wave groups Laboratorija Zvuka, and Pekinška Patka, performed in Rani Mraz with Đorđe Balašević, and worked with Mitar Subotić and Marina Perazić. He became a full-time member of Balašević's group in 1986 and appeared on all of his albums from Bezdan to Dnevnik starog momka. During his time with Balašević, he also played in a jazz rock group called California. In a 2017 interview, he identified Jaco Pastorious and Pat Metheny as his favourite musicians.
Kravić has also written music and sang vocals on his composition "Plavo nebo, zlatno žito" at the 2012 Zlatna tamburica festival.

Political career

Kravić knew Nenad Čanak socially in the 1980s. An opponent of Slobodan Milošević's rule in Serbia, he was a founding member of the LSV under Čanak's leadership in 1990.
The LSV contested the 1996 Serbian local elections as part of the Vojvodina Coalition, and Kravić was elected to the Novi Sad City Assembly under its banner. He took part in negotiations to enter Novi Sad's coalition government in May 1997; these plans did not come to fruition as scheduled when some members of the Zajedno alliance, at the time the leading force in the municipal government, refused to endorse the Vojvodina Coalition in a crucial vote. Kravić described this development as "a totally unexpected bombshell," and members of the Coalition walked out of the assembly in protest.
The Miloŝević government fell in October 2000, in the aftermath of that year's Yugoslavian general election. The LSV participated in this election, and in the concurrent 2000 Vojvodina provincial election, as part of a broad coalition called the Democratic Opposition of Serbia. This coalition won a landslide victory in the provincial contest with 101 out of 120 seats; Kravić was among the DOS candidates elected, winning in Novi Sad's eighth district. As the new administration took power, it removed many of Milošević's supporters from state institutions; in November 2000, Kravić was appointed as acting director of Radio Television Novi Sad pending the appointment of a permanent replacement. The following month, he argued that the affiliated Radio Television of Serbia would need to be decentralized in a manner consistent with a broader strategy of increased regional autonomy. He was nominated for permanent director in late 2001 but was passed over in favour of Petar Jovanović. He later accused the station of returning Milošević-era functionaries to positions of power, further asserting that this was being done deliberately "to either humiliate or destroy Novi Sad TV."
Kravić was a member of Vojvodina's executive committee after the fall of Milošević, serving as its deputy chair until September 2003; after stepping down from this position, he was appointed as deputy chair of the provincial assembly. In May 2001, he introduced a successful amendment to a bill on privatizing state institutions, indicating that the provincial government alone should have final discretion over such matters. In February 2004, he said that the LSV and Democratic Party had resolved their differences over the wording of a proposed Basic Law of Vojvodina and that the province would proceed with this document even if the Serbian government had not yet completed its revisions of the country's constitution.
Vojvodina's electoral system was changed for the 2004 provincial election, shifting from a first-past-the-post system of single-member constituency seats to a combined system of proportional representation and run-off constituency elections. The DOS alliance had broken down by this time, and the LSV contested the election at the head of a coalition called Together for Vojvodina. Kraviċ sought re-election in Novi Sad's redistributed third district but was defeated. He sought a return to the assembly in Novi Sad constituency seats in the 2008 and 2012 elections but was defeated both times. During the 2012–16 sitting of the assembly, he served as assistant secretary of state for culture and public information in the provincial government, in charge of regional cooperation and projects. Prior to the 2016 election, Vojvodina's constituency seats were abolished and the province adopted a system of pure proportional representation; Kravić appeared on the LSV's electoral list but not in a high enough position to return to the assembly.
Kravić continued to serve in the Novi Sad City Assembly after the fall of Milošević and has been re-elected to several terms in the body. In the 2008–12 sitting of the assembly, he served on city council with responsibility for youth and sport. He was elected to a new term in the 2016 Serbian local elections and was subsequently re-appointed to city council after the LSV joined a somewhat unusual municipal coalition led by the Serbian Progressive Party and its allies.
Kravić has also been a candidate for election to the National Assembly of Serbia on four occasions, though he has never served in the body. He appeared on the LSV's Together for Tolerance list in the 2003 election; the list did not cross the electoral threshold to win representation in the assembly. The LSV subsequently contested the 2007 election in alliance with the Liberal Democratic Party, and Kravić received the 107th list position. The list won fifteen mandates, and he was not selected as part of his party's delegation. In 2011, Serbia's electoral system was reformed such that mandates were awarded in numerical order to candidates on successful lists. Kravić appeared as a LSV candidates in the 2014 and 2016 elections, but in each instance in too low a position to be returned.

Electoral record

Provincial (Vojvodina)

Igor PavličićFor a European Vojvodina5,73024.7110,88770.97
Zoran MašićSerbian Radical Party4,63720.004,45329.03
Aleksandar KravićTogether for Vojvodina4,62019.93
Dejan GojkovićCitizen's Group: Maja Gojković2,57711.11
Marko KrstićDemocratic Party of Serbia–New Serbia1,8467.96
Andrija ŠrekLiberal Democratic Party1,3895.99
Novak VukojePeople's Movement for Vojvodina
1,2155.67
Zoran ObradovićSocialist Party of Serbia–Party of United Pensioners of Serbia1,0714.62
Total valid votes23,18510015,340100
Invalid ballots689235
Total votes casts23,87460.9115,57539.74

Svetlana Lukić-PetrovićDemocratic Party3,29723.249,96259.74
Zoran MašićSerbian Radical Party3,43424.216,71440.26
Miodrag IsakovClean Hands of Vojvodina2,41917.05
Aleksandar Kravić Together for Vojvodina1,88113.26
Petar MudriCitizens' Group: For a Better Petrovaradin and Novi Sad1,2238.62
Miodrag KomarDemocratic Party of Serbia1,0807.61
Uranija Kozmidis LuburićG17 Plus8505.99
Total valid votes14,18410016,676100
Invalid ballots548409
Total votes casts14,73240.8417,08547.36