Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/lists-of-national-presidents

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

List of presidents of Croatia

None


Summary

None

This is a list of heads of state of the Republic of Croatia, since the independence of Croatia.

Historically, the republican system was introduced in the Socialist Republic of Croatia while it was a constituent republic of the SFR Yugoslavia, and its head of state is discussed in the history of politics of the Socialist Republic of Croatia.

Since 1990, the President of the Republic of Croatia (Predsjednik) is directly elected to a five-year term and is limited to a maximum of two terms. However, with the Constitution of 2001, the powers of the President (much expanded in 1990) were now again severely curtailed, as Croatia shifted from a semi-presidential system, to an incomplete parliamentary system. As in most parliamentary systems, the President is now by-and-large a ceremonial office, with the Prime Minister de facto heading the executive branch.

Presidents of the Republic of Croatia (1990–present)

Source:

On 30 May 1990 Franjo Tuđman was elected by Parliament as the President of the Presidency of the Socialist Republic of Croatia, then still a constituent republic of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and held office together with several Vice Presidents of the Presidency of SR Croatia. The collective presidency was reduced to seven members on 25 July 1990 and the name of the constituent Yugoslav republic was changed to the Republic of Croatia by removing the word Socialist from its name and the names of its institutions. The collective presidency was abolished in favor of the post of President of the Republic of Croatia with the adoption of a new constitution on 22 December 1990. The Croatian Parliament then declared independence on 25 June 1991, when Tuđman formally became the first president of an independent Croatian nation under the name the Republic of Croatia.

(*)The constitutional amendments of November 2000 abandoned a semi-presidential system for a parliamentary system (with a directly elected president) and also made the presidency a non-partisan office, meaning that even if they are elected to office as a candidate of a particular political party, the president must resign membership in that party before taking office.

(2)

(2)

(1)

No.PictureName
(Birth–Death)Term of officeElectionPolitical partyNo.Term startTerm end
Croatian Democratic Union}}; text-align: center;"[[File:Franjotudjman.jpg100pxFranjo Tuđman]]Franjo Tuđman
(1922–1999)Croatian Democratic Union}}; text-align: center;"30 May 199012 August 1992Croatian Democratic Union
Croatian Democratic Union}}; text-align: center;"12 August 199211 August 19971992 (56.73%)
Croatian Democratic Union}}; text-align: center;"12 August 199710 December 1999 †1997 (61.41%)
Parliament elected him the President of the Presidency of SR Croatia in May 1990, but with the adoption of a new constitution on 22 December 1990, the title of the office was changed to President of the Republic of Croatia and the Presidium of Croatia (Presidency) was abolished. Tuđman presided over the period when Croatia gained independence and ultimately joined the United Nations in May 1992. Tuđman won re-election to a de facto second and third term in 1992 and 1997, winning election outright both times without the need for a run-off. He is the only president to have been elected in the first round of elections. He died in office in December 1999.
Croatian Democratic Union}}; text-align: center;"[[File:Vlatko Pavletić 1996.jpg100pxVlatko Pavletić]]Vlatko Pavletić
(1930–2007)Croatian Democratic Union}}; text-align: center;"10 December 19992 February 2000Acting President
Tuđman was incapacitated since 26 November 1999 and died on 10 December 1999. Pavletić became acting president as Speaker of the Croatian Parliament. He was succeeded by Zlatko Tomčić when the 4th Assembly of Parliament was replaced by the 5th Assembly after the 2000 election.
Croatian Peasant Party}}; text-align: center;"[[File:Zlatko Tomčić (cropped).jpg100pxZlatko Tomčić]]Zlatko Tomčić
(1945–)Croatian Peasant Party}}; text-align: center;"2 February 200018 February 2000Acting PresidentCroatian Peasant Party
Became acting president as Speaker of Parliament when the 4th Assembly of Parliament (1995-2000) was replaced by the 5th Assembly (2000–2003). Served until Stjepan Mesić was sworn in as the new president on 18 February 2000.
Croatian People's Party – Liberal Democrats}}; text-align: center;"[[File:Stjepan Mesić (2004-02-25) (cropped).jpg100pxStjepan Mesić]]Stjepan Mesić
(1934–)Croatian People's Party – Liberal Democrats}}; text-align: center;"19 February 200018 February 20052000 (56.01%)Croatian People's Party – Liberal Democrats* (formally independent)
Independent (politician)}}; text-align: center;"19 February 200518 February 20102005 (65.93%)
He defeated Dražen Budiša in the 2000 presidential elections. He was the first president with reduced powers, as the semi-presidential system was replaced by an incomplete parliamentary system in November 2000. Mesić was re-elected in 2005, defeating Jadranka Kosor in a landslide.
Social Democratic Party of Croatia}}; text-align: center;"[[File:16 obljetnica vojnoredarstvene operacije Oluja Ivo Josipovic 04082011 c 876.jpg100pxIvo Josipović]]Ivo Josipović
(1957–)Social Democratic Party of Croatia}}; text-align: center;"19 February 201018 February 20152009–10 (60.26%)Social Democratic Party* (formally independent)
He defeated Milan Bandić by a wide margin in the 2010 election. He was narrowly defeated by Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović in his re-election bid in 2015.
Croatian Democratic Union}}; text-align: center;"[[File:Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović (cropped).jpg100pxKolinda Grabar-Kitarović]]Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović
(1968–)Croatian Democratic Union}}; text-align: center;"19 February 201518 February 20202014–15 (50.74%)Croatian Democratic Union* (formally independent)
She defeated incumbent president Ivo Josipović in the second round of the 2015 election. She is the first female president since independence and also the youngest, aged 46. She was defeated by Zoran Milanović in her reelection bid in 2020.
Social Democratic Party of Croatia}}; text-align: center;"[[File:Zoran Milanović at Palazzo del Quirinale 2021 (11) (cropped).jpg100pxZoran Milanović]]Zoran Milanović
(1966–)Social Democratic Party of Croatia}}; text-align: center;"19 February 202018 February 20252019–20 (52.66%)Social Democratic Party* (formally independent)
Independent (politician)}}; text-align: center;"19 February 2025Incumbent2024–25 (74.68%)
Milanović defeated incumbent president Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović in the second round of the 2020 election. He was re-elected in 2025, defeating Dragan Primorac in a landslide. Milanović became the first president to win a second term since Stjepan Mesić in 2005.

A – Acting President

(**) From the abolishment of the collective Presidency of the Republic of Croatia on 22 December 1990

References

References

  1. "Croatian Presidents".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about List of presidents of Croatia — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report