President Zoran Milanovic has announced that he will not support any of the three candidates running for President of the Supreme Court and that he will reveal the name of his candidate "shortly."
“I will not accept any of those persons. It’s nothing personal. This is a serious deviation in constitutional practice and custom,” Milanović said in an exclusive interview for Nova TV on Thursday evening marking his first year in office.
“I have been thinking about this for a while, talking about it and trying to keep it discreet. I want to come out in public with my proposal in good time, proposing a person who meets my criteria and who is acceptable to both the ruling majority and the opposition,” the president said.
He said that he would discuss the matter with the prime minister and the leader of the opposition Social Democratic Party, “and possibly with someone else so that I do not go with a candidate who is a thorn in someone’s side, but that we try and find a compromise.”
Asked when the public would learn the name of his candidate, Milanovic said that it would be “in due course”. He said he did not want it to be like four years ago “when the current Supreme Court president was chosen at the last minute because the president (Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic) had her own candidate who was unacceptable to (Prime Minister) Plenkovic.” He added that he wants the person he opts for to be present in the public for a while and that it would be good if that person was not a Supreme Court judge.
Speaking of the Russian-made Sputnik V vaccine against Covid-19, Milanovic said that Croatia should look after its own interests and that the government’ should buy this vaccine because it was its “fundamental duty and loyalty to its people”.
Commenting on the appointment of Metropolitan Porfirije of Zagreb and Ljubljana as the new patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC), Milanovic described Porfirije as a high dignitary of the SPC “who is above the standard of those before him.”
“He will come under great pressure because the SPC is part of the Serbian state, while the Catholic Church in Croatia is not part of the Croatian state,” Milanovic said, adding that the SPC wielded great influence on politics, particularly in Montenegro. “It now has great influence in Montenegro, and not good influence at that. We will see. There are a lot of challenges.”
Milanovic said he could not see how the new SPC leader could serve as a bridge to his Serbian counterpart Aleksandar Vucic. “We are secular statesmen. I am the president of a democratic European country, while Vucic is the president of a country with a different political system and a different approach to democracy,” he added.
On the subject of local elections in May, Milanovic said he would not vote because he wanted to be consistent. “I should be consistent here. I did not vote (in the parliamentary election) because I strongly believe that in the present scheme of things the President of the Republic should not vote and provoke questions as to who he voted for. The President should be exempt from that. You will not see me in the polling station.”
Asked about his presidency, Milanovic said that being President “is not a job, but a calling, it’s a lifestyle.” Asked what he will be remembered for, he said: “You will remember the year, not me, for bad things.” He added that “there were certainly some good things and some less good things, and some things were possibly too impulsive.”
Milanovic said that his style was unique and that his voters were aware of it. “People knew very well who they were voting for and I do not think they were surprised at all. What you see is what you get.”
As for his relationship with Prime Minister Plenkovic, Milanovic said that it was such that “in all sensitive and difficult matters” he was sympathetic and supportive. “I did not analyse too much, I did not criticise, nor did I follow every move made by the government and comment on each of its tactical measures because that would be unfair.”
He said that he was against the state of emergency in the country imposed by “a group of unknown and unelected people who have been formally deciding about our fundamental human rights and freedoms for a year now.”
Asked about his Facebook comments on women victims of sexual violence, which were seen by some as downplaying their plight, Milanovic said that he was elected by Croatian citizens, both men and women, and that he treated women “gender neutrally, as conscious autonomous beings fighting for their rights.”
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