- Yugoslav Left
's widow.
It was considered an all-Yugoslavia partyref|Yugo, as opposed to Slobodan Milošević's
Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), which had only a Serbian base (the SPS did not run in Montenegro, theSocialist People's Party of Montenegro or SNP, was its partner in the Federal Assembly). Despite minor differences, these parties collaborated closely. JUL has generally not taken part in elections separately. Several members of the SPScrossed the floor to JUL at some stage.ref|freeserbIn 1996, JUL ran in a coalition with the SPS and New Democracy. The party has had some ten MPs and representatives in various local assemblies. It has held ministerial posts during Milošević's period. In the 2003 Serbian legislative elections, JUL received only a 0.1% of the votes.ref|broad
As for international cooperation, JUL has visited the gatherings of several leftwing political forces both in
Europe and worldwide, including ties with theChinese Communist Party ,Communist Party of Cuba andWorkers' Party of Korea .Its social base is mainly amongst peasants and pauperised workers, but it also had members from the so-called "nouveau riche" of Serbia during Milošević's terms in office, and many high-ranked civil servants and army staff. During 1990s, opponents of Milošević's government sometimes nicknamed JUL "a branch of
Communist Party of China in Yugoslavia".References
* [http://www.ptb.be/scripts/article.phtml?section=A3ABBBAC&obid=7220 Yugoslav Left leader: "All people in Yugoslavia should live together"]
* [http://www.broadleft.org/yu.htm Broad Left entry on JUL]
* [http://www.xs4all.nl/~freeserb/politics/e-jul.html Critical analysis on the party by Soros-funded NGO]
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