Saša Janković was in the position of state ombudsman from 2007 to 2017 and as such, he often criticised practices of the government, led by the
Serbian Progressive Party and
Aleksandar Vučić. This positioned him among voters as opposition spokesperson and led to him enjoying relatively high ratings in relation to actual opposition leaders and politicians. As his term was about to end, he decided to resign and run in the presidential elections, scheduled for April 2017. His most notable endorsement came from the
Democratic Party, which decided to support Janković, rather than to have a candidate of its own. This helped him create a relatively united front against Vučić in the upcoming elections. In the 2017 leadership elections Janković finished second with 16.3% of the vote and decided to form his own political movement, rather than joining the Democratic Party. His movement "Apel 100", formed for the purposes of gathering support from intellectuals and other notable citizens for his presidential candidacy, was thus transformed into a political organisation, the Movement of Free Citizens. Some of the founders of the Movement are
Goran Marković,
Zdravko Šotra,
Nikola Đuričko,
Sergej Trifunović,
Srbijanka Turajlić,
Borka Pavićević and
Vlado Georgiev. Many of the founding members left the Movement by November 2017, accusing Janković of running it like his own 'company', and revealed that Janković's wife exerts enormous influence on how the Movement is run. Following the accusations, the Movement's Presidency held an emergency meeting, where Janković offered his resignation, a motion denied by the Presidency. This turmoil within the Movement led political analysts and other opposition leaders and politicians to question the capacity of Janković and the Movement to lead the opposition against Vučić's government. On 17 December 2018 Janković resigned. Candidates for the new president were actor
Sergej Trifunović and lawyer
Aleksandar Olenik. Elections were held on 26 January 2019, and Trifunović won with 60% of the votes. Olenik and most of other high officials left the movement and announced creation of new party,
Civic Democratic Forum. Trifunović supported
protests against Vučić. Movement signed
Agreement with people along with other opposition parties on 6 February. After nine months of protests and the unsuccessful conclusion of the negotiation mediated by the
University of Belgrade Faculty of Political Sciences and NGOs, in August 2019, Trifunović wrote an open letter to
David McAllister, the
Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the
European Parliament, asking him to consider facilitating a cross-party dialogue. The first round of inter-party European Parliament-mediated dialogue in Serbia took place two months later. The PSG's candidates in the
2023 Serbian parliamentary election carried formal endorsements from the
Civic Democratic Party (GDP). In early 2024, the Civic Democratic Party permitted the Movement of Free Citizens to take over its party registration, and the PSG for the first time became an officially registered party. == Political positions ==