Vladimir Joković

Vladimir Joković (Serbian Cyrillic: Владимир Јоковић; born 2 January 1967) is a Montenegrin politician, sports administrator and former karateka. He is the current leader of the Socialist People's Party (SNP), since August 2017, and the current member of the Parliament of Montenegro, elected from the For the Future of Montenegro (ZBCG) common electoral list, at the 2020 parliamentary election. He also currently serve as the President of the Assembly of the Karate Federation of Montenegro, since 2019, he previously served as President of the Federation.

Vladimir Joković
Владимир Јоковић
Vladimir Joković in Podgorica, February 2019
Member of Parliament of Montenegro
Assumed office
30 August 2020
PresidentAleksa Bečić
President of Karate Federation of Montenegro
In office
13 May 2017  12 January 2019
Preceded byDragan Šakotić
Succeeded byIvan Krstajić
Personal details
Born (1967-01-02) 2 January 1967
Plužine, SFR Yugoslavia
(now Montenegro)
NationalityMontenegrin
Political partySocialist People's Party
EducationUniversity of Montenegro
ProfessionPolitician, sports administrator
Medal record
Men's karate
Representing  Serbia and Montenegro
European Championship
1994 Birmingham Kumite +80 kg

Biography

Vladimir Joković was born in Plužine, small town in northwestern Montenegro, at that time part of the Socialist Republic of Montenegro of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Having finished elementary and Electrotechnical High school in Nikšić. He is married and has two daughter and son.[1]

Sports career

He represented FR Yugoslavia from 1991 to 2000. He has won many awards for his sportsmanship. He is one of the most famous karate masters from Montenegro. He has a 4th Dan black belt in karate and is the winner of multiple national Serbia and Montenegro and regional Balkans Karate Championships. In May 2017 Joković became the president of the Montenegrin Karate Federation.[2]

Political career

Joković has been a member of the Socialist People's Party of Montenegro (SNP) since the 1990s. After Socialist People's Party President Srđan Milić resignation after 11 years of leading party for a catastrophically poor results at 2016 parliamentary elections. Joković, supported by party faction led by former president of party parliamentary club Aleksandar Damjanović and current mayor of Berane Dragoslav Šćekić, was surprisingly elected President of the party at SNP's eight congress held on 13 August 2017, in front of favored Snežana Jonica, supported by fraction close to former party leader Milić. Prior to the party's congress in August 2017, Joković was a member of the SNP municipal board in Plužine, as well as one of the party's councilors in the local parliament.[3]

On 1 May 2019 SNP sign an agreement with Independent parliamentary group of Parliament of Montenegro composed of United Montenegro (UCG), Workers' Party (RP) and two independent MPs, including former SNP high-ranking member Aleksandar Damjanović, forming new catch-all alliance named For the Benefit of All[4] Alliance eventually dissolved prior the parliamentary election in August 2020, all three parties decided to join a pre-election coalition with right-wing Democratic Front (DF) alliance, under the name For the Future of Montenegro, employing a more significant cultural and socially conservative discourse, supporting 2019-2020 clerical protests in Montenegro and Serbian Orthodox Church rights in Montenegro.[5] As the leader of SNP, Joković received the fifth position on the combined electoral list and was elected to the Parliament of Montenegro after the coalition won 32.55% of popular vote and 27 MPs (in the 81-seat parliament of Montenegro).[6]

References

  1. Vladimir Joković Biography, SNP official website
  2. Joković novi predsjednik Karate saveza, Vijesti (2017)
  3. Joković novi predsjednik SNP-a, Vijesti, 13. August 2017
  4. Savez ,,Da svako ima“, Analitika, 30 April 2019
  5. DF, SNP, Narodni pokret i Prava zajedno na izborima, Vijesti, 31 July 2020
  6. "Nova lica i politički veterani u novom sazivu Skupštine". vijesti.me (in Serbian). Retrieved 2020-09-07.
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