She is the wife of Vuk Drašković, the co-founder and former president of the Serbian Renewal Movement and former minister of foreign affairs of Serbia.
[2] After finishing her education in a gymnasium in Bijelo Polje, she rolled into the Faculty of Law of the University of Belgrade.
[1] Drašković officially entered politics once the Serbian Renewal Movement (SPO) was founded in March 1990.
[2] Despite not holding any important positions inside SPO, Drašković has influenced the ideology and actions of the party.
She has been cited as the main reason behind the dissolution of the Together coalition in 1997, the successful motion of no confidence of mayor of Belgrade Zoran Đinđić, and the decision for SPO to join the federal government led by Slobodan Milošević's Socialist Party of Serbia.
Once SPO joined Vojislav Koštunica's government in 2004, it was alleged that Drašković was the one who chose her husband's diplomatic team.
[15] Skrozza has written that Drašković received controversy due to "not caring about the consequences for her or her husband" about the hardline views she expressed in her columns.
[2] Sociologist Ana Vuković has claimed that Drašković had left a rather negative image of female politicians in Serbia.
[16] Drašković has criticised Aleksandar Vulin, a government minister and president of the Movement of Socialists; she has described him as a fascist and as "Mirjana Marković's commissioner".
[2] Srpska reč and her cafe Zmaj were bought in 2024 by Predrag Ranković "Peconi", a businessman closely connected to the ruling Serbian Progressive Party.
[2] The Chamber of the District Court concluded in 2002 that the government of Serbia had to pay Drašković RSD 1,250,000 due to injuries that she sustained.