Enis Imamović

[3] In January 2009, Imamović charged that a mob encouraged by rival parties sought to assassinate SDA leader Sulejman Ugljanin during a confrontation at the Novi Pazar headquarters of the SDA-led Bosniak List for a European Sandžak alliance.

[4] The Sandžak Democratic Party (SDP), the SDA's principal rival at the time, rejected the claim that anyone sought to harm Ugljanin, let alone assassinate him.

The party won two mandates; he was not immediately elected but received a seat on 25 July 2012 as the replacement for Ifeta Radončić, who resigned on the day the assembly convened.

Imamović was promoted to the second position on the SDA's list for the 2014 parliamentary election and was re-elected when the party won three seats.

[18] The SDA afterward formed an assembly group with the Albanian Democratic Alternative (a coalition led by the PDD), and Imamović once again served in the role of deputy leader.

[19] In July 2021, he took part in a SDA–Albanian Democratic Alternative delegation that met with Albin Kurti, prime minister of the Republic of Kosovo (which is not recognized by Serbia).

[20] Imamović was also appointed as a member of Serbia's delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) on 25 January 2021.

[22] After the election, the SDA became part of an assembly group called European Regions that also included delegates from Vojvodina and from Serbia's Albanian community.

[26] Imamović met with Albin Kurti again in February 2023, as part of a SDA–PDD delegation that called for reciprocity of rights between the Kosovo Serb community and Bosniaks and Albanians living in Serbia.

Imamović initially said that he would lead an independent list in the 2023 Serbian parliamentary election, and rumours circulated that he would join forces with former Justice and Reconciliation Party (SPP) member Jahja Fehratović.