National Assembly (Serbia)
National Assembly Народна скупштина Narodna skupština | |
|---|---|
| 14th National Assembly | |
Logo of the National Assembly of Serbia | |
| Type | |
| Type | |
| History | |
| Founded | 1858 1991 (current form) |
| Leadership | |
Vice-presidents | Elvira Kovács (VMSZ/SVM), Edin Đerlek (SPP), Jovan Janjić (MI–GIN), Marina Raguš (SNS) since 20 March 2024 Nevena Đurić (SNS) since 19 March 2025 |
Secretary-general | Srđan Smiljanić |
| Structure | |
| Seats | 250 |
Political groups | Government (Cabinet of Đuro Macut) (138)
PUPS–SP (6) SDPS (6) Independents (2)
VMSZ/SVM (6) JS (5) Opposition (96) SSP (12) ZLF (10) SRCE (8) DS (8) MI–GIN (7) EU (5) MI–SN (5) |
| Committees | 20
|
| Elections | |
| Party-list proportional representation with 3% electoral threshold | |
Last election | 17 December 2023 |
Next election | By 31 December 2027 |
| Meeting place | |
| House of the National Assembly 13 Nikola Pašić Square, Belgrade, Serbia | |
| Website | |
| parlament.rs | |
The National Assembly (Serbian: Народна скупштина, Narodna skupština, pronounced [nǎːrodnaː skûpʃtina]) or Parliament (Serbian: Парламент, Parlament, pronounced [parlameːnt]), formally the National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia (Serbian: Народна скупштина Републике Србије, romanized: Narodna skupština Republike Srbije), is the unicameral legislature of Serbia. The assembly is composed of 250 deputies who are proportionally elected to four-year terms on the basis of direct, universal, and equal suffrage by secret ballot. It is presided over by a President of the National Assembly (speaker), who is assisted by at least one vice-president (deputy speaker).
The National Assembly exercises supreme legislative power. It adopts and amends the Constitution, laws, elects Government, appoints state officials such as the Supreme Public Prosecutor, Ombudsman, Governor of the National Bank of Serbia, President of the State Audit Institution. All decisions are made by majority vote of deputies at the session at which a majority of deputies are present, except for amending the Constitution, when a two-thirds majority is needed.