Prime Minister Milojko Spajić's government will survive until 2027, agree Miloš Bešić, a professor at the Faculty of Political Sciences (FPN) in Belgrade, Zoja Bojanić Lalović, a member of parliament from the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS), and Momčilo Leković, a member of parliament from the Democratic Party of Montenegro, although they explain this conclusion differently.
On the Montenegrin political scene, the most promising political factor is the coalition For the Future of Montenegro, which is recording a growth in support, while the Europe Now Movement (PES) has recorded a significant decline this year, but in recent months its support has been returning, Bešić told the show Načisto, which aired tonight on Television Vijesti.
However, he explains that the growth of support for the For the Future of Montenegro coalition could be negatively affected by the increasingly pronounced differences between the leaders of the strongest constituents, the President of the Parliament of Montenegro and the leader of the New Serbian Democracy (NSD) Andrija Mandić and the President of the Democratic People's Party (DNP) Milan Knežević.
"Whether this is a staged split or is this split really real, that is what I would be very interested in seeing. At first I really thought that it was a fake game, now it doesn't seem like that to me, it simply seems to me that there are some real foundations there, that there is some specific split there. If this split is real and real, then the answer to your question will become paradoxical, because then the coalition For the Future of Montenegro, due to this enthusiasm they have from participating in the government, will be at a loss if they divide among themselves," said Bešić.
He said that Mandić is in Washington.
"He certainly didn't go to Washington without knowing where he was going and in what arrangement. And of course in the narrative, if you look at Mr. Mandić, the European Union, etc., etc., you see a change in his appearance," said Bešić.
He said that this is an arrangement that suits both the Western partners and Mandić equally.
"I think Mr. Knežević does not want to participate in that kind of game. And I think that is the essence of the split," Bešić said.
He also said that PES had a very bad trend at one point.
"And it came to some very bad results, 15, 16 percent, and then in recent months they have returned to around 20 percent," Bešić said.
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