
For the 2014 parliamentary election, he formed an alliance with the small Montenegrin Party and appeared in the second position on its electoral list. The party received 28,977 votes (0.74%), well below the five per cent threshold needed to enter the assembly.

īroz led the Communist Party's electoral list of sixty candidates in the 2012 Serbian parliamentary election. According to the report, Broz described the attack on Libya as a criminal act. In 2011, the Jamahiriya News Agency reported that Broz sent a cable of condolence to Muammar Gaddafi, his family, and the Libyan people following the death of Saif al-Arab Gaddafi in a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) bomb strike in the 2011 military intervention in Libya. The party was officially registered in December 2010. In an interview with Danas, Broz said that the new party would try to reconnect all of the former Yugoslav republics on social and economic issues he added that he accepted the need for greater integration with the European Union but that only Russia could be a strategic partner for Serbia. On 23 November 2009, Broz was elected as the leader of Serbia's newly formed Communist Party, created via a merger of his own political organization with Novi Sad's Union of Social Democrats and Zrenjanin's New Communist Party. Ultimately, however, he did not appear as a candidate on any officially registered electoral list. He used Tito's image and the motto, "Where I stopped, you continue," in the campaign.
#JOSIP DABRO BIOGRAFIJA FREE#
Today, we are nobody and nothing." In 2010, he said that the Tito years were “a time of safety and security a working father could support a whole family, education and healthcare was free for all Yugoslavia had a good reputation around the globe.” Political career īroz intended to seek election to Serbia's national assembly in the 2003 parliamentary election at the head of a coalition of four minor left-wing parties. This reflects nostalgia about the time when we all lived well, when we all, generally, lived happy and dignified lives. Broz later welcomed the founding of the (ceremonial) "Republic of Titoslavia" in Rakovica, Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2005 he was quoted as saying, "This does not reflect some fashion trend or nostalgic feelings about Tito's state, which has been and forever gone. He also remarked that Tito had confided to him in 1978 that his greatest mistake was allowing nationalists in Yugoslavia to present their beliefs for public discussion. At a memorial ceremony for Tito in 2000, he argued that his grandfather had permitted the 1968 student demonstrations in Yugoslavia to take place and subsequently addressed the underlying issues behind the protests by political means. īroz has consistently defended Tito's political legacy and rejected charges that his grandfather was a dictator. "My grandpa raised me to be a modest man, not different from ordinary people." He added that his modesty helped him to survive the tragedies that befell Serbia and Yugoslavia in the 1990s. "I am not sorry because the family has nothing," he was quoted as saying. Although he was in frequent contact with Tito, he was not raised in affluent conditions and did not become wealthy by inheritance a 2002 newspaper profile described him as living in a small, dilapidated house in Belgrade's Dedinje area and working as a cook in Zemun. He has a degree from the Belgrade University Faculty of Forest Management, and at different times worked at military game preserves (where he learned to cook wild game) and as a forester, metal worker, and policeman in charge of security for his grandfather. He is the eldest son of Tito's son Žarko Broz and Tamara Veger, a Russian.


A self-professed Yugoslav, Broz is the grandson of Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito and one of the most prominent supporters of the Titoist legacy within the former Yugoslavia.īroz has led Serbia's Communist Party since its formation in 2009 and has served in the National Assembly of Serbia since 2016, sitting with the Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) parliamentary group.īroz was born in Belgrade, in what was then the People's Republic of Serbia in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. Josip Broz ( Serbian Cyrillic: Јосип Броз born 6 December 1947), commonly known as Joška Broz ( Serbian Cyrillic: Јошка Броз), is a Serbian politician.
