Local elections were held in most cities and municipalities of Serbia (excluding the disputed territory of Kosovo) on 21 June 2020, with repeat voting later taking place in some communities.
As expected, the results were a victory for the Serbian Progressive Party's coalition, which finished first in most cities and municipalities, often with more than fifty per cent of the vote.
The only other municipality where the Progressive Party and its allies did not win an outright majority was Stari Grad, where they fell two seats short.
He was replaced by Bojan Bovan, a longtime ally of Šapić who had been elected on the list of the Serbian Patriotic Alliance and participated in the party's merger into the Progressives.
[51] The new municipal administration included the Socialist Party and the Serbian Patriotic Alliance, and was supported by forty-seven members of the assembly.
[82] Parliamentarian Árpád Fremond was elected to the local assembly from the sixth position on the Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians list.
[105] Former mayor Zoltán Pék was re-elected to the assembly after an absence of eight years from the third position on the Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians list.
[106] Local elections were held in the one city (Novi Sad) and all eleven of the separate municipalities of the South Bačka District.
Results of the election for the City Assembly of Novi Sad: Incumbent mayor Miloš Vučević of the Progressive Party led the For Our Children list.
[110] Vučević stood down as mayor in October 2022 after being appointed as a minister in the Serbian government and was replaced by fellow Progressive Party member Milan Đurić.
Milomir Starčević, who had been elected to the assembly as a member of the Socialist Party of Serbia, was appointed as president of a provisional administration.
The Progressive Party and its allies won in all jurisdictions, taking majority victories everywhere except Ljubovija (where they fell one seat short).
Former parliamentarian Dragan Aćimović was elected from the lead position on the Serbian Radical Party's list and was appointed afterward as deputy speaker of the assembly.
[232] Results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Gornji Milanovac: Incumbent mayor Dejan Kovačević of the Serbian Progressive Party was confirmed for another term in office with the support of thirty-four delegates.
[272] Lutovac Đurđević resigned as mayor on 30 October 2023 to prompt a new local election later in the year and was appointed as leader of a provisional authority.
The Serbian Progressive Party and its allies won majority victories in the predominantly Serb municipalities of Kraljevo, Raška, and Vrnjačka Banja.
The Progressives formed government in Topola after the election with support from smaller parties, but a political realignment in April 2021 brought Better Serbia back to power.
[298] Future parliamentarian Nikola Nešić, the leader of the local party New Strength (Nova Snaga), was re-elected from the second position on the independent "An Alternative" list.
[306] Future parliamentarian Slađana Radisavljević of the Democratic Party of Serbia appeared in the fourth position on the METLA list.
Military trade union official Novica Antić, who entered political life in an individual capacity, received the largely symbolic twenty-ninth position out of thirty on the same list.
[310] Mladenović resigned on 30 October 2023 to prompt a new election later in the year; a provisional administration was established with Dejan Aranđelović, also of the Progressive Party, as its leader.
Dragan Jovanović was elected from the lead position on the Better Serbia list and initially served as leader of the opposition in the assembly.
[322][13] Jovanović was expelled from the assembly in November 2020, on the grounds that he had changed his residence from Topola to Belgrade and was no longer on the local voters list.
The Serbian Progressive Party's coalition won majority victories in Užice, Bajina Bašta, Nova Varoš, Požega, and Priboj.
It also won plurality victories in Arilje and Prijepolje; in both of these areas, a representative of the Progressive Party was subsequently chosen as mayor.
Healthy Serbia leader Milan Stamatović led his coalition to a majority victory in Čajetina, and in Sjenica the Justice and Reconciliation Party formed government in an alliance with the Progressives.
The new alliance controversially held an assembly meeting (not attended by the other delegates) that dismissed Mujagić and elected Nermin Kamberović of the SDP as mayor.
[368] Kamberović was chosen as his replacement later in the month, heading a new administration that included the SDP, the SDA, two independent delegates, and four members of the recently formed Party for the Future and Development.
[373] Momir Stojanović, the leader of the local Honestly for Niš party, appeared in the first position on the People's Blok list.
[416] His resignation became official on 30 October, at which time Jasmina Vojinović, also of the Progressive Party, was appointed as leader of a provisional authority.