Within Austria-Hungary in 1848
Events of 1848 in Europe and the
Austrian Empire brought dramatic changes to Croatian society and politics, provoking the
Croatian national revival that strongly influenced and significantly shaped political and social events in Croatia. At the time, the
Sabor and Ban
Josip Jelačić advocated the severance of ties with the
Kingdom of Hungary, emphasising links to other
South Slavic lands within the empire. Several prominent Croatian political figures emerged, such as
Ante Starčević,
Eugen Kvaternik,
Franjo Rački and
Josip Juraj Strossmayer. A period of
neo-absolutism was followed by the
Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 and the
Croatian–Hungarian Settlement, which granted limited independence to Croatia. This was compounded by Croatian claims of uninterrupted statehood since the early Middle Ages as a basis for a modern state. Two political parties that evolved in the 1860s and contributed significantly to the sentiment were the
Party of Rights, led by Starčević and Kvaternik, and the
People's Party, led by
Janko Drašković,
Ivan Kukuljević Sakcinski,
Josip Juraj Strossmayer and
Ivan Mažuranić. They were opposed by the National Constitutional Party, which was in power for most of the period between the 1860s and the 1918, and advocated closer ties between Croatia and Hungary. Other significant parties formed in the era were the
Serb People's Independent Party, which later formed the
Croat-Serb Coalition with the Party of Rights and other Croat and Serb parties. The Coalition ruled Croatia between 1903 and 1918. The leaders of the Coalition were
Frano Supilo and
Svetozar Pribićević. The
Croatian Peasant Party (HSS), established in 1904 and led by
Stjepan Radić, advocated Croatian autonomy but achieved only moderate gains by 1918. The Autonomists won the first three elections, but all elections since 1870 were won by the People's Party. In the period 1861–1918 there were seventeen elections in the
Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia and ten in the
Kingdom of Dalmatia. The
1921 constitution defined the kingdom as a
unitary state and abolished the historical administrative divisions, which effectively ended Croatian autonomy; the constitution was opposed by HSS. The political situation deteriorated further as Stjepan Radić of the HSS was assassinated in the
Yugoslav Parliament in 1928, leading to the dictatorship of King
Alexander in January 1929. The HSS, now led by
Vladko Maček, continued to advocate the
federalisation of Yugoslavia, resulting in the
Cvetković–Maček Agreement of August 1939 and the autonomous
Banovina of Croatia. The Yugoslav government retained control of defence, internal security, foreign affairs, trade, and transport while other matters were left to the Croatian Sabor and a crown-appointed Ban. This arrangement was soon made obsolete with the beginning of
World War II, when the
Independent State of Croatia, which banned all political opposition, was established. Since then, the HSS continues to operate abroad. In the 1945 election, the Communists were unopposed because the other parties abstained. Once in power, the Communists introduced a single-party political system, in which the
Communist Party of Yugoslavia was the ruling party and the
Communist Party of Croatia was its branch. In 1971, the Croatian national movement, which sought greater civil rights and the decentralisation of the Yugoslav economy, culminated in the
Croatian Spring, which was suppressed by the Yugoslav leadership. In January 1990, the Communist Party fragmented along national lines; the Croatian faction demanded a looser federation.
Modern Croatia in December 2011 In 1989, the government of the
Socialist Republic of Croatia decided to tolerate political parties in response to growing demands to allow political activities outside the Communist party. The first political party founded in Croatia since the beginning of the Communist rule was the
Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS), established on 20 May 1989, followed by the
Croatian Democratic Union on 17 June 1989. In December 1989,
Ivica Račan became the head of the reformed Communist party. At the same time, the party cancelled political trials, released political prisoners and endorsed a multi-party political system. The Civil Organisations Act was formally amended to allow political parties on 11 January 1990, legalising the parties that were already founded. By the time of the first round of the
first multi-party elections, held on 22 April 1990, there were 33 registered parties. The most relevant parties and coalitions were the League of Communists of Croatia – Party of Democratic Changes (the renamed Communist party), the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), and the
Coalition of People's Accord (KNS), which included the HSLS led by
Dražen Budiša, and the HSS, which resumed operating in Croatia in December 1989. During his term, Croatia's declaration of independence from Yugoslavia took effect on 8 October 1991. Franjo Tuđman won the presidential elections in
1992 and
1997. During his terms, the
Constitution of Croatia, adopted in 1990, provided for a
semi-presidential system. After Tuđman's death in 1999, the constitution was amended and much of the presidential powers were transferred to the parliament and the government. In January 2020, former prime minister
Zoran Milanovic of the Social Democrats (SDP) won the presidential election. He defeated center-right incumbent Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic of the ruling Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) in the second round of the election. In July 2020, the ruling right-wing HDZ won the parliamentary election. Since 2016 ruled HDZ-led coalition of prime minister
Andrej Plenković continued to govern. ==Legal framework==