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Milan Ilić (politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Milan Ilić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Илић; born 23 March 1990) is a Serbian politician. He was elected to the National Assembly of Serbia in the 2020 parliamentary election as a member of the Serbian Progressive Party.

Private career

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Ilić was born in Vranje, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.[1] He still lives in the city and was an economics student at the time of the 2020 election.[2]

Politician

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Ilič sought election to the Vranje municipal assembly in the 2012 Serbian local elections as a candidate of the far-right Serbian Radical Party, appearing in the twenty-sixth position on that party's electoral list.[3] The list did not win any mandates.[4] He subsequently left the Radicals and joined the Progressive Party. Ilić is a member of the Progressive Party's city board in Vranje and has served in the party's Academy of Young Leaders program.[5]

Parliamentarian

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Ilić was given the eighteenth position on the Progressive Party's Aleksandar Vučić — For Our Children list in the 2020 Serbian parliamentary election.[6] This was tantamount to election, and he was indeed elected when the list won a landslide majority with 188 mandates. He is a member of the committee on the diaspora and Serbs in the region; a deputy member of the European integration committee and the committee on labour, social issues, social inclusion, and poverty reduction; a deputy member of Serbia's delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Mediterranean; the leader of Serbia's parliamentary friendship group with Grenada; and a member of Serbia's parliamentary friendship groups with Armenia, the Czech Republic, France, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Russia, Slovakia, and the United Arab Emirates.[7]

References

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  1. ^ MILAN ILIĆ, Otvoreni Parlament, accessed 5 December 2020.
  2. ^ "Ko je sve na listi SNS za republičke poslanike?", Danas, 6 March 2020, accessed 30 June 2020.
  3. ^ Službeni Glasnik (Grada Vranja), Volume 19 Number 11 (25 April 2012).
  4. ^ Službeni Glasnik (Grada Vranja), Volume 19 Number 17 (25 May 2012).
  5. ^ "Ilić: Na mladima SNS ostaje", Vranje News, 6 February 2020, accessed 2 July 2020. This source indicates that Ilić would be a candidate in both the republic and local elections in 2020. Ultimately, he did not run in the local election.
  6. ^ "Ko je sve na listi SNS za republičke poslanike?", Danas, 6 March 2020, accessed 30 June 2020.
  7. ^ MILAN ILIC, National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia, accessed 26 December 2020.