Dritan Abazović and the New URA Chaos: Deputy President, Four Vice Presidents, and What It Means for Montenegro?

URA in the Whirlwind of Change: Dritan Abazović Proposed as President, Deputy President Role Introduced!

Ready for another political circus in Montenegro? The Civic Movement URA confirmed Dr. Dritan Abazović’s candidacy for party president for the next four-year term at today’s main board meeting. But wait, there’s more – they’re introducing a deputy president role, and up to four vice presidents can serve simultaneously! Is this URA trying to consolidate power or just making a bigger mess?

New Leader, New Rules

Dritan Abazović, who has already led the movement, is now officially proposed as president at the upcoming congress scheduled for July 5 on Lovćen. Alongside him, candidates for vice presidents include Ana Novaković Đurović, Milena Vuković, and Blažo Rađenović. The most intriguing part? The introduction of the deputy president position, a role that didn’t exist before in URA.

Four Vice Presidents? Isn’t That Too Many?

Most parties usually have one or two vice presidents, but URA is going all in – allowing up to four. Is this an attempt to satisfy all internal interests or a sign that URA is falling apart? The fourth regular congress will reveal if this new structure brings stability or more chaos.

What Does This Mean for Montenegro?

URA is a key player in Montenegro’s political scene, and leadership changes can have big consequences. Dritan Abazović is known as a controversial politician, and his reappointment might spark mixed reactions. Introducing new roles and increasing the number of vice presidents could be a move to strengthen the party or dilute power within it.

Congress on Lovćen – Spectacle or Salvation?

The congress on July 5 will be under the spotlight. Will URA manage to consolidate and come out stronger, or will it fragment further? All eyes are on Dritan Abazović and his team. Thought Montenegrin politics was boring? Think again!

Conclusion

URA is shaking things up with new roles, more vice presidents, and confirming Dritan Abazović as leader. Is this a sign of strength or weakness? One thing’s for sure – Montenegro’s political scene has never been more interesting. Got thoughts on these changes? Drop a comment and maybe spark the next big political debate!


And hey, if you think this is just another boring political story, remember – Montenegro’s politics always has a twist, and it happens fast! Who knows what July 5 will bring?

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