Following a short stint as secretary at Titograd's District Court, he worked as a lawyer until entering politics in March 1993.
The elections were held for a third time on 11 May 2003, with the minimum turnout rule abolished, and Vujanović won again with 63% of the vote.
Vujanović's messages often focus on Montenegro's and Serbia's ability to have a peaceful separation and post-independence cooperation, and he is friends with former Serbian president Boris Tadić.
[citation needed] On 31 July 2012, President Vujanović passed a Decision on Calling Elections for Members of the Parliament of Montenegro.
The parliamentary elections were held on 14 October and were won by the Coalition for European Montenegro, dominated by DPS.
[citation needed] On 5 December 2012, Vujanović hosted the 4th Regional Summit of the Heads of States, held in Budva.
On 13 June 2013, Vujanović was participating in the 18th Summit of the Heads of States of the Central European Countries, held in Bratislava.
[citation needed] Vujanović, as President of Montenegro, recognized the Independence of Kosovo, a Serbian autonomous province.
Since May 1985, he has been married to Svetlana Vujanović, a court judge, with whom he has three children: two daughters (Tatjana and Nina), and a son (Danilo).