Zoran Milanović

President

Birthday October 30, 1966

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Zagreb, SR Croatia, Yugoslavia

Age 57 years old

Nationality Croatia

#23637 Most Popular

1937

His father, Stipe Milanović (1937–2019), was an economist, and his mother, Đurđica "Gina", is a former teacher of English and German.

His paternal family hails from the Sinj environs.

He stated that his father's family roots going back a century or two are from Livno, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

1942

His paternal grandfather and paternal great-uncle, Ante and Ivan Milanović, respectively, from Glavice, joined the Yugoslav Partisans in 1942, taking part later in the liberation of Trieste.

His maternal family Matasić is an old Senj bourgeois family, with some distant roots in Lika, Gacka valley.

His maternal grandmother and grandfather were Marija (Glavaš) and Stjepan Matasić, respectively.

Their daughter Đurđica, Milanović's mother, was born and raised in Senj with three other siblings.

1943

Stjepan Matasić was killed in 1943 when the Allies bombed German-occupied Senj.

Marija then moved with her children to Sušak, where she met Petar Plišić, a blacksmith from Ličko Lešće, whom she married and moved together with him to Zagreb, where they raised Đurđica and the rest of her siblings.

1966

Zoran Milanović (born 30 October 1966) is a Croatian politician serving as President of Croatia since 19 February 2020.

1970

He was brought up in the neighbourhoods of Knežija, and after 1970 in Trnje, a communist quarter.

1981

Milanović attended the Center for Management and Judiciary from 1981.

Milanović partook in sports, including football, basketball and boxing.

1996

He served as Advisor at the Croatian mission to the European Union and NATO in Brussels from 1996 to 1999.

During the same year he joined the Social Democratic Party.

1998

In 1998 he earned his master's degree in European Union law at the Free University Brussels and was an assistant to the Croatian foreign minister for political multilateral affairs in 2003.

2007

In June 2007 he was elected president of the SDP, following the death of the long-time party leader and former prime minister Ivica Račan.

Under Milanović's leadership the party finished in second place in the 2007 parliamentary election and was unable to form a governing majority.

2008

Despite losing the election, he was reelected party leader in 2008.

2011

Prior to assuming the presidency, he was prime minister from 2011 to 2016 and president of the Social Democratic Party from 2007 to 2016.

After graduating from the Zagreb Faculty of Law, Milanović started working in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In 2011 Milanović initiated the formation of the Kukuriku Coalition, uniting four centre to centre-left political parties.

The coalition won an absolute majority in the 2011 parliamentary election, with the SDP itself becoming the largest party in Parliament.

Milanović thus became Prime Minister on 23 December 2011, after the Parliament approved his cabinet.

The beginning of his prime ministership was marked by efforts to finalise the ratification process of Croatia's entry into the European Union and by the holding of a membership referendum.

His cabinet introduced changes to the tax code, passed a fiscalisation law and started several large infrastructure projects.

After the increase in the value of the Swiss franc, the government announced that all Swiss franc loans would be converted into euros.

Milanović supported the expansion of same-sex couples' rights and introduced the Life Partnership Act.

2015

After the inconclusive 2015 election and more than two months of negotiations on forming a government, he was ultimately succeeded as prime minister by the nonpartisan technocrat Tihomir Orešković in January 2016.

2016

After Orešković's government fell, Milanović led the four-party People's Coalition in the subsequent snap parliamentary election in September 2016.

In the election, his coalition suffered a surprise defeat to the centre-right Croatian Democratic Union and Milanović announced his withdrawal from politics.

He then entered the consulting business and worked as an advisor to Albanian prime minister Edi Rama.

Plišić, was—as Milanović revealed in 2016—an Ustasha, a member of the paramilitary corps established by the Nazi-collaborationist government of the Independent State of Croatia.

After World War II, he served two years in Stara Gradiška prison before being released.

Zoran's father was a member of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (SKJ).

Milanović was baptized secretly by his maternal grandmother Marija at the Church of St. Peter and Paul in Zagreb, and given the baptismal name Marijan.

2019

On 17 June 2019, Milanović announced that he would be running for the office of president in the 2019–20 election as the candidate of the Social Democratic Party; he was officially nominated on 6 July.

He received the most votes (29.55%) in the first round of the election on 22 December 2019, ahead of incumbent president Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović (26.65%) and was elected as the fifth president of Croatia in the runoff on 5 January 2020, with 52.66% of the vote.

He became the first presidential candidate in Croatian history to receive more votes than an incumbent officeholder in the first round of an election, the second person in Croatia to defeat an incumbent running for reelection and the first (post-independence) prime minister of Croatia to be elected head of state.

He had a brother, Krešimir, who died in 2019.