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Ivica Račan

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Ivica Račan
File:Ivica Racan.jpg
7th Prime Minister of Croatia
In office
January 31, 2000 – December 23, 2003
Preceded byZlatko Mateša
Succeeded byIvo Sanader
Personal details
BornFebruary 24, 1944
Germany Ebersbach, Germany
DiedApril 29, 2007, age 63
Croatia Zagreb, Croatia
Political partySocial Democratic Party of Croatia
SpouseDijana Pleština

Ivica Račan (February 24, 1944 - April 29 2007) was a Croatian leftist politician, and the Prime Minister of Croatia from 2000 to 2003. He died of kidney cancer.[1]

Ivica Račan was married three times and had two sons from his first marriage.

Early life

He was born in Ebersbach, Germany, where his mother was interned in a labor camp. He and his mother survived the Allied bombing of Dresden in which they were buried for days in the basement of a collapsed building.

Political career

1972-1989: Early political career

During socialist Yugoslavia, Račan entered politics in 1972 and became a member of the League of Communists of Croatia. In the 1970s he slowly rose in its positions inside the Party, following the removal from the leading positions of reformists after collapse of the Croatian Spring. By the end of the 1980s he emerged as one of the Party's leaders. He became its leader in 1989.

Račan led the Croatian delegation in the XIV. congress of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia which was held at the end of January 1990. The congress was dominated by Slobodan Milošević's supporters and Slovenian and Croatian delegations were continually voted down. Finally the Slovenian delegation declared they were leaving the party. Milošević tried to persuade Račan to stay, but Račan replied that a Communist Party without the Slovenes was not acceptable. Without the Croatian delegation it was impossible to reconvene the congress. (Adam Le Bor: Milošević)

Račan broke other taboos of socialist Yugoslavia, too: he was the first president of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Croatia who publicly congratulated believers in Croatia at Christmas in 1989, and he organized the multiparty elections a few months later.

1990-1999: In opposition

Following the multi-party elections, he became the leader of the reformed League of Communists of Croatia (which added Party of Democratic Change to its name). During the campaign for multi-party elections of 1990 Račan created a storm of controversy when he referred to the Croatian Democratic Union (Hrvatska Demokratska Zajednica or HDZ in Croatian), the eventual winner of the elections, as a party of dangerous intentions.

His Party lost the election, but remained the second largest party in new Parliament, and Račan was supposed to continue his political career, this time the first leader of opposition in history of modern Croatia. SKH however, quickly became the shadow of its former self - the majority of its membership, including the highest ranking officials, defected to HDZ, while the collapse of Yugoslavia, ethnic Serb rebellion and war further radicalized Croatian public. In such circumstances, Račan was more concerned with the mere survival of his Party than with challenging Franjo Tuđman's rule, even if it meant tolerating some of Tuđman's more controversial policies, like nationalization of worker's owned enterprises, privatization or various human rights abuses.

In such circumstances, when his party used to be ironically called "HDZ Little Sister", Račan gave up the opposition leader's title to Dražen Budiša of Croatian Social Liberal Party. SDP barely managed to pass the threshold in 1992 parliamentary elections, but it established itself as a social democratic option. In 1994 SDP incorporated Social Democrats of Croatia and became an alternative to Tuđman.

2000-2003: Return to power

Following the end of the war, Croatian voters were becoming more concerned with social issues, and in such circumstances SDP gradually began to consolidate support at the expense of other opposition parties, most notably HSLS. This became evident at 1995 parliamentary and 1997 presidential elections. In 1998 Račan and Budiša created alliance that would win parliamentary elections two years later.

Following the election, Račan became the prime minister of Croatia with the help of HSLS, and the centrist bloc which comprises Croatian Peasants Party (HSS), the Liberal Party (LS), Croatian People's Party (HNS), Istrian Democratic Congress (IDS). All of those six parties had ministers within Račan's cabinet.

Račan, like the newly elected president Stjepan Mesić, was initially hailed as a new, reformist leader who would symbolize the break with Croatia's authoritarian and nationalist past. While a democrat, Račan was, however, inefficient in running a government comprising six parties, the first coalition in modern Croatian history. His style of governance, symbolized by the phrase "Odlučno možda" ("Decisive perhaps" in English), plagued his government with factional struggles. Račan had to adopt a compromise-making attitute which limited the government's ability to commit fully to what should be done.

This led to the break-up with Budiša who took a more nationalist approach in dealing with the issues of ICTY indictments against Croatian Army generals. This rift began to affect Račan's government in other issues. IDS was the first to leave the coalition.

Račan briefly resigned on July 5, 2002 after their coalition partner HSLS obstructed the ratification of a vital agreement with Slovenia on the status of the co-owned nuclear power plant in Krško. The HSLS later split into the main faction that left the government and a dissenting faction that formed a new party called Libra which enabled Račan to form a slightly modified government that would remain in power until the next elections.

Račan's best achievements were in foreign policy. He successfully brought Croatia out of the semi-isolation of the Tuđman era and set the country on the road towards membership of the European Union. During his term as prime minister, the Constitution of Croatia was amended, turning Croatia from a semi-presidential system to a parliamentary democracy and granting more power to the instutitions of the Sabor (parliament) and prime minister. Among other things, Račan opened the government's workings to the people with "open-doors day" at the government and regular press conferences, in sharp contrast to previous governments who mostly shunned media attention.

During his term in office, Croatia also changed economically. The opening to the West brought fresh inflows of capital which helped jump-start Croatia's GDP growth, which held at about 5% during the years of the Račan government - high compared to previous years. The government also undertook a wave of reforms in the public and government sectors and started large building projects, such as affordable housing and the Zagreb-Split highway, long-desired due to importance in tourism.

2003: Back to opposition

His center-left coalition lost the parliamentary majority with the elections of November 2003. Ivica Račan ceased to be the prime minister on December 23, 2003 when the Croatian Parliament gave its consent for his successor, Ivo Sanader of the Croatian Democratic Union.

SDP is currently the most popular party in opinion polls, and Ivica Račan was, until recently, viewed as the leader of Croatian opposition. While viewed indecisive as prime minister, he proved to be very skillful in his party maintaining the leadership position for fifteen years. Račan publicly stated that this was his last term as the party president, and observers see former defense minister Željka Antunović as his successor.

Illness and death

On January 31, 2007, Ivica Račan announced that he was temporarily leaving politics due to health reasons. Željka Antunović took the chairmanship of the Party. Contrary to what his doctors were telling the public, his health began to worsen and after examinations, it was found that cancer had spread to his brain.[2] On April 11, following the further deterioration of his health, he resigned as leader of the main opposition party in Croatia, the SDP.[3] On the morning of April 12, 2007 his condition was described as "critical" due to complications which occurred after he had a couple of surgical procedures to remove the tumor on his right shoulder. On the same day, Radio 101 reported his death based on "unofficial information from various sources", but SDP denied this. After that, he was reported to be in a critical condition, unable to communicate and under heavy sedation. He died of kidney cancer[1] on April 29, in the Clinical Hospital Centre in Zagreb, at 3:05 am.[4] He was laid to rest on Wednesday, May 2, at the Krematorij cemetery. Only 12 of the closest friends and family (including wife and both sons) were present.

References


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