In the
2007 parliamentary election, the party won 3 out of 120 seats in the
Transitional Assembly of Kosovo (
Slobodan Petrović, Bojan Stojanović, Kosara Nikolić), with Petrović also being elected into the Presidency of the Assembly, while in January 2008 ILP also gained two ministerial posts in the
Transitional Government of Kosovo (Boban Stanković,
Nenad Rašić). In February 2008, upon the
Kosovo declaration of independence, ministers from ILP left the Government in protest, but returned to their posts already by the end of March. In the
2010 parliamentary election, the party won 2.1% of the popular vote and 8 out of 120 seats. In February 2011, the ILP joined the coalition government of
Hashim Thaçi, with ILP leader Slobodan Petrović becoming one of five
deputy prime ministers. In the same time, ILP got three ministries: Local Self-Government (Slobodan Petrović), Communities and Return (Radojica Tomić), and Labor and Social Welfare (Nenad Rašić). In the spring of 2014, a fraction led by minister
Nenad Rašić splintered from ILP and formed the
Progressive Democratic Party. In the
2014 parliamentary election, the party joined the
Serb List coalition that won 9 seats (4 seats for ILP candidates:
Slobodan Petrović, Saša Milosavljević, Jelena Bontić, Jasmina Živković), while the separate electoral list of ILP won only 0.05% of the popular vote, and thus no additional seats. In the
2017 parliamentary election, the party won 0.49% of the popular vote, and one seat (
Slobodan Petrović). In the
2019 parliamentary election, the ILP won only 0.22% of the popular vote, and got no seats. The party was recognizing Kosovo's independence from Serbia. Its overall stance was liberal. ==References==