Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić has once again demonstrated his well‑known political tactic: shift blame, manipulate public perception, and present himself as the eternal “victim” of an opposition that he and his party have systematically suppressed for years.
After this morning’s incidents in front of the National Assembly in Belgrade, Vučić rushed to accuse the opposition of “showing a violent nature,” pretending that the chaos in the country doesn’t stem directly from the authoritarian system he has built.
With astonishing hypocrisy, Vučić claimed that opposition members were “tearing down tents,” insisting that they supposedly attack only what they dislike and that they would even “shoot at people,” referring to events in front of the Parliament. Such dramatic, fabricated accusations have become his signature style — inflating tensions to paint himself as the protector of Serbia while demonizing anyone who dares oppose him.
Speaking at an SNS pre‑election rally in Mionica, Vučić delivered his usual cynical sermon, calling on SNS supporters “not to attack the opposition.” It’s the same tired narrative: incite hostility, then pretend to preach peace.
He even went so far as to call the opposition “bad for Serbia,” while simultaneously playing the benevolent leader who offers them “both hands.” This nauseating performance—calling political opponents misguided “brothers and sisters”—is nothing more than a polished mask covering the deep political rot and intimidation that have defined his rule.
For years, Vučić has tried to portray himself as the stabilizer of Serbia, but every new statement only confirms the opposite: he is the main source of division, manipulation, and political toxicity. Today’s accusations are just another act in his long‑running show of control and illusion.
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