Tito, as a president of the republic, was
ex officio president of the Presidency. After his death a new president of the presidency was elected every year. The order of rotating of the members on the leading position was agreed in advance, so this annual election was a pure formality. The rotating system jammed only in May 1991 –
Stipe Mesić, representative of
Franjo Tuđman's new
Croatian government in the presidency, was about to become the president but was not elected due to opposition of a half of the presidency controlled by
Serbian leader
Slobodan Milošević. The top state office of the disintegrating federation remained vacant until 1 July when Mesić was finally elected. Only one year after Tito's death, Yugoslav leaders had to face
violent riots in
Kosovo. On 2 April 1981 the presidency under president
Cvijetin Mijatović declared a
state of emergency in
Priština and
Kosovska Mitrovica, which lasted one week. The presidency declared a state of emergency again, that time on the whole territory of Kosovo, on 27 February 1989 under president
Raif Dizdarević, when
even more serious disorders in Kosovo broke out. For the third time in post-Tito Yugoslavia, a state of emergency in Kosovo was imposed by the presidency in February 1990. The composition of the last Presidency elected in May 1989 reflected both approach of political pluralism in some parts of the federation and the beginning of agony in Yugoslavia: •
Janez Drnovšek from
Slovenia and
Bogić Bogićević from
Bosnia and Herzegovina were elected in direct elections held in their republics • representatives of Serbia,
Montenegro, Kosovo and
Vojvodina, i.e. half of the presidency, were acting under
de facto control of Slobodan Milošević •
Stipe Šuvar, Croat representative of strongly pro-Yugoslav opinions, was in October 1990 replaced by Stipe Mesić nominated by Croatian government. In summer 1991 Mesić and Drnovšek, regarding their republics independent, ceased to attend sessions of the presidency. They were followed by Bogićević and
Vasil Tupurkovski from
Macedonia, so that the presidency de facto ceased to exist, although the members from Serbia, its autonomous provinces (Kosovo and Vojvodina) and Montenegro continued to regard themselves as Yugoslav and so held sessions until 1992 when the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was proclaimed, this time with an individual
head of state elected by the
federal assembly. ==Composition (1971–1992)==