Following the vote of no confidence in 2013,
Dragan Đilas was dismissed as
mayor, and a temporary body was set up by the
Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), who has ruled Belgrade since then. The current session of the City Assembly was elected in
2018, after SNS,
Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) and
United Serbia (JS) formed a majority.
Zoran Radojičić, an independent endorsed by SNS, was elected mayor, succeeding
Siniša Mali, while
Goran Vesić was elected deputy mayor. The 2018 election also marked the return of Đragan Đilas to politics, and his list ended up gaining 26 seats, while the list led by
Aleksandar Šapić won 12 seats. Later that year, the
Alliance for Serbia (SzS) was formed by Đilas, along with
Vuk Jeremić,
Zoran Lutovac, and
Boško Obradović. It was a major opposition alliance, that also played a key role in the
2018–2020 protests, and it boycotted the
2020 parliamentary election.
Municipal elections were held in Belgrade after the parliamentary election, in which, SNS won a majority in all 16 Belgrade
municipalities except
New Belgrade, where the
Serbian Patriotic Alliance (SPAS), which was led by Aleksandar Šapić, managed to form a local government, third time in a row. During that period,
protests erupted in Belgrade over the announcement of the reimplementation of the curfew and government's allegedly poor handling of the
COVID-19 pandemic. The demonstrators took to the streets, stormed the
National Assembly building, and clashed with the police. The clashes and riots continued for the next few days, while the police used excessive force. In May 2021, Šapić merged his party into SNS, after which he was promoted to vice president of the party. A series of
environmental protests have been held in Belgrade as early as January 2021, although since September 2021, the protests have garnered greater attention, which led to
roadblocks on the
Gazela Bridge in November and December 2021. == Electoral system ==