Prime Minister of Croatia
The prime minister of Croatia, officially the president of the Government of the Republic of Croatia, is Croatia's head of government, and is de facto the most powerful and influential state officeholder in the Croatian system of government. Following the first-time establishment of the office in 1945, the 1990–2000 semi-presidential period is the only exception where the president of Croatia held de facto authority. In the formal Croatian order of precedence, however, the position of prime minister is the third highest state office, after the president of the Republic and the speaker of the Parliament.
The Constitution of Croatia prescribes that "Parliament supervises the Government" and that "the President of the Republic ensures the regular and balanced functioning and stability of government", while the Government is introduced in Article 108. Since 2000, the prime minister has had various added constitutional powers and is mentioned before the Government itself in the text of the Constitution, in Articles 87, 97, 99, 100, 101, 103, 104. The current prime minister of Croatia is Andrej Plenković. The Government of Croatia meets in Banski dvori, a historical building located on the west side of St. Mark's Square in Zagreb.
Name
The official name of the office, literally translated, is "President of the Government", rather than "Prime Minister". When the office was first established in 1945, the name "President of the Government" was introduced. The name of the office was changed 8 years later with the Yugoslav constitutional reforms of 1953, into "President of the Executive Council". After another round of constitutional reforms in 1990, the office was renamed back to its original 1945-1953 title of "President of the Government". For all periods, however, the term "Prime Minister" is colloquially used in English-language usage.History
The Royal Government of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia was headed by Ban, who represented the King. The first head of government of Croatia as a constituent republic of Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia was Vladimir Bakarić, who assumed the position on 14 April 1945. The position was then, as it is today, the most powerful public office in the state. In post-World War II Socialist Republic of Croatia, a single-party system was in place. During this time there were twelve heads of government, all from the ranks of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, which was reformed and renamed into the League of Communists of Yugoslavia in 1952. The federal party was organized into six sub-organizations - the republic parties, one for each of the six federal republics. Croatian politicians and prime ministers of the period were members of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia through their membership in the League of Communists of Croatia, the Croatian part of the federal party. The office remained the central post of Croatian politics in spite of the institution of a collective Presidency in 1974.After the constitutional amendments that allowed for multi-party elections in Croatia, the Parliament enacted amendments to the constitution which eliminated socialist references and adopted new national symbols. The newly elected tricameral Parliament proceeded to change the Constitution of Croatia, and on 22 December 1990, this so-called "Christmas Constitution" fundamentally defined the Republic of Croatia and its governmental structure. From the 1990 constitutional reforms onward Croatia was a semi-presidential republic, which meant the president of Croatia had broad executive powers, including the appointment and dismissal of the prime minister and other officials in the government. During this period, lasting until constitutional amendments in late 2000, Croatia had seven prime ministers. The first prime minister of Croatia since the 1990 constitutional reforms was Stjepan Mesić, assuming office on 30 May 1990.
Following the May 1991 independence referendum in which 93% of voters approved secession, Croatia formally proclaimed independence from Yugoslavia on 25 June 1991, with Josip Manolić continuing in the role of prime minister as head of government of an independent Croatia. However, the country then signed the July 1991 Brijuni Agreement in which it agreed to postpone further activities towards severing ties with Yugoslavia. Meanwhile, the Croatian War of Independence ensued, and Franjo Gregurić was appointed to lead a Government of National Unity. In October the same year, Croatia formally severed all remaining legal ties with the Yugoslav Federation.
Following the January 2000 general election the winning centre-left coalition led by the Social Democratic Party amended the Constitution and effectively stripped the President of most of his executive powers, strengthening the role of the Parliament and the prime minister, turning Croatia into a parliamentary republic. The prime minister again became the foremost post in Croatian politics.
To date there have been twelve Prime Ministers who have chaired 14 governments since the first multi-party elections. Nine prime ministers were members of the Croatian Democratic Union during their terms of office, two were members of the Social Democratic Party and one was not a member of any political party. Since independence there has been one female prime minister, while Savka Dabčević-Kučar was the first woman to hold an office equivalent to a head of government as Chairman of the Executive Council of the Socialist Republic of Croatia.
Prime ministers of Croatia
Prime ministers of the [Socialist Republic of Croatia] within SFR Yugoslavia">Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia">SFR Yugoslavia (19451990)
Prime ministers of the [Republic of Croatia] (1990–present)
Still a part of SFR Yugoslavia until 25 June 1991.Statistics
Spouses of prime ministers
Name | Relation to Prime Minister |
Milka Mesić | wife of Prime Minister Stjepan Mesić |
Marija Eker Manolić | wife of Prime Minister Josip Manolić |
Jozefina Gregurić | wife of Prime Minister Franjo Gregurić |
Erika Šarinić | wife of Prime Minister Hrvoje Šarinić |
Antonela Valentić | wife of Prime Minister Nikica Valentić |
Sanja Gregurić-Mateša | wife of Prime Minister Zlatko Mateša |
Dijana Pleština | wife of Prime Minister Ivica Račan |
Mirjana Sanader | wife of Prime Minister Ivo Sanader |
Jadranka Kosor divorced before becoming prime minister | |
Sanja Musić Milanović | wife of Prime Minister Zoran Milanović |
Sanja Dujmović Orešković | wife of Prime Minister Tihomir Orešković |
Ana Maslać Plenković | wife of Prime Minister Andrej Plenković |
Living former heads of government of Croatia
There are eleven living former heads of government. The last former head of government to die was Hrvoje Šarinić on 21 July 2017.Presidents of the Executive Council of the Socialist Republic of Croatia :
Prime ministers of the Republic of Croatia :
Facts and records of Croatian prime ministers (since 30 May 1990)
Age at appointment
- Oldest person to assume office: Josip Manolić
- Youngest person to assume office: Nikica Valentić
Age at retirement
- Oldest person to leave office: Josip Manolić
- Youngest person to leave office: Nikica Valentić
Oldest and youngest living prime ministers
- Oldest living prime minister: Josip Manolić
- Youngest living prime minister: Andrej Plenković
Longest and shortest lived prime ministers
- Longest-lived prime minister: Josip Manolić
- Shortest-lived prime minister: Andrej Plenković
Longest and shortest retirements
- Living prime minister with the longest period lived after leaving office: Stjepan Mesić
- Living prime minister with the shortest period lived after leaving office: Tihomir Orešković
- Deceased prime minister with the longest period lived after leaving office: Hrvoje Šarinić
- Deceased prime minister with the shortest period lived after leaving office: Ivica Račan
Age difference between incoming and outgoing officeholders
- Largest age difference between an incoming and outgoing prime minister: Franjo Gregurić was 19 years, 204 days younger than Josip Manolić whom he succeeded in 1991.
- Smallest age difference between an incoming and outgoing prime minister: Jadranka Kosor was 23 days younger than Ivo Sanader whom she succeeded in 2009.
Length of service
- Longest-serving prime minister: Ivo Sanader
- Shortest-serving prime minister: Stjepan Mesić
Terms of office and number of cabinets
- Two terms in office: Ivo Sanader, Ivica Račan and Andrej Plenković
- One term in office: Stjepan Mesić, Josip Manolić, Franjo Gregurić, Hrvoje Šarinić, Nikica Valentić, Zlatko Mateša, Jadranka Kosor, Zoran Milanović and Tihomir Orešković
- Prime Ministers who won the most parliamentary elections: Ivo Sanader and Andrej Plenković
- Prime Minister who headed the most cabinets while in office: Ivo Sanader, Ivica Račan and Andrej Plenković
- Cabinet with longest duration: Cabinet of Zlatko Mateša
- Cabinet with shortest duration: Cabinet of Stjepan Mesić
Size of cabinet
- Prime Minister of cabinet with largest number of members during its duration : Franjo Gregurić
- Prime Minister of cabinet with smallest number of members during its duration : Ivo Sanader
- Prime Minister of cabinet with largest number of members on date of formation: Josip Manolić
- Prime Minister of cabinet with smallest number of members on date of formation: Stjepan Mesić
- Prime Minister of cabinet with largest number of members on date of dissolution : Franjo Gregurić
- Prime Minister of cabinet with smallest number of members on date of dissolution : Ivo Sanader
Number of political parties in cabinet
- Prime ministers of cabinets with largest number of political parties represented in them during their total duration : Franjo Gregurić
- Prime ministers of cabinets with the smallest number of political parties represented in them during their total duration : Stjepan Mesić, Josip Manolić, Hrvoje Šarinić and Zlatko Mateša
- Prime minister of cabinet with the largest number of parties represented in it on the date of its formation: Ivica Račan
- Prime ministers of cabinets with the smallest number of parties represented in them on the date of their formation: Stjepan Mesić, Josip Manolić, Hrvoje Šarinić and Zlatko Mateša
- Prime minister of the cabinet with the largest number of political parties represented in it on the date of its dissolution: Ivica Račan
- Prime ministers of cabinets with the smallest number of political parties represented in them on the date of their dissolution: Stjepan Mesić, Josip Manolić, Franjo Gregurić, Hrvoje Šarinić, Nikica Valentić, Zlatko Mateša and Ivo Sanader
Female prime ministers
- First female prime minister: Jadranka Kosor
Other national and international offices held after retirement
- Only prime minister to have held the three highest offices of government: Stjepan Mesić — Prime Minister, Speaker of Parliament and President
- Only prime minister to have served as head of state of another independent country: Stjepan Mesić
- First prime minister elected president: Stjepan Mesić
- First prime minister elected Speaker of Parliament: Stjepan Mesić
- First prime minister elected Speaker of the Chamber of Counties : Josip Manolić
- Only prime minister to become Secretary General of the Non-Aligned Movement: Stjepan Mesić
Foreign-born prime ministers
- Ivica Račan was born in Ebersbach, now Ebersbach-Neugersdorf, Germany
Prime ministers born in predecessor states of modern Croatia (before 1991)
- Prime ministers born in:
- *Kingdom of Yugoslavia : Josip Manolić, Stjepan Mesić, Hrvoje Šarinić and Franjo Gregurić
- *Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia : Zlatko Mateša, Nikica Valentić, Ivo Sanader, Jadranka Kosor, Zoran Milanović, Tihomir Orešković and Andrej Plenković
Period lived before Croatian independence was declared (25 June 1991)
- Oldest prime minister on date of Croatia's declaration of independence: Josip Manolić
- Youngest prime minister on date of Croatia's declaration of independence: Andrej Plenković
Service under the most heads of state
- Prime ministers who served under the most Presidents : Jadranka Kosor, Zoran Milanović and Andrej Plenković, Ivo Josipović and Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović and Zoran Milanović )
- Prime ministers who served under the most heads of state : Ivica Račan