The party was formed in April 2000 by former
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) senior government officials
Mate Granić and
Vesna Škare-Ožbolt. They both left the conservative HDZ after the party's decisive defeat in the
January 2000 election, and Mate Granić's defeat in the
February 2000 presidential race. The 2000 defeat, which came in the aftermath of the death of the party's longtime leader
Franjo Tuđman, ousted HDZ after nearly a decade of being in power. In the ensuing internal power struggles, a number of factions, ranging from hard-line nationalists to center-right moderates, left to form their own parties. Granić, former foreign minister, and Škare-Ožbolt, a
jurist, were among the more prominent moderates. When the party was formed, DC described themselves as a "modern democratic popular party with a European orientation, and a party advocating for a strong
civil society." Meanwhile
Ivo Sanader prevailed as HDZ's new leader and began moving the party towards the center-right. In the
2003 general election DC was allied with HDZ, and, following HDZ's return to power, gained a single seat in the
Croatian Parliament, and a single ministerial post in the
Cabinet of Ivo Sanader I, as Škare-Ožbolt, the party's leader and their only representative elected to parliament, was appointed
Justice Minister. She held the post from December 2003 to February 2006, when she was forced to step down by Prime Minister
Ivo Sanader following allegations that she leaked information to the media, although some media pundits ascribed her resignation to her prominent public stance and ministerial results which overshadowed HDZ ministers. After that, DC spent the rest of their existence in opposition. In October 2002, the Democratic Centre became an observer member of the
European People's Party (EPP). In the
2007 general elections DC ran independently, entering coalition agreements with the
Green Party in some constituencies. They failed to win any seats in the 153-seat parliament. Škare-Ožbolt also ran for President in the
2009–10 election as a formally independent candidate but only managed to win 37,373 or 1.89% of votes in the first round, finishing 11th out of twelve candidates. On 6 November 2015, Škare-Ožbolt and the leader of HDZ at the time,
Tomislav Karamarko, signed a formal agreement formalizing the merger of DC back into HDZ. DC ceased to exist when it was struck from the register of political parties in April 2016.
Election history Legislative The following is a summary of the party's results in elections for the
Croatian Parliament. The "Votes won" and "Percentage" columns include total sums of votes won by campaign coalitions that DC had been part of, and the "Seats won" column shows results achieved by DC.
European Parliament == References ==