Jahja Fehratović

The results were extremely contentious, and the legitimacy of the Bosniak Cultural Community's victory was contested by both the Serbian government and Ugljanin's party.

Zukorlić's group held a constituent session for the council on 7 July 2010, which was also attended by two delegates from Bosniak Renaissance.

[8] The following year, the BDZ split into two rival factions, respectively led by Zukorlić and party leader Emir Elfić.

[11] Fehratović charged electoral fraud, saying that all of the overseers for a special second ballot in Tutin had been members of Ugljanin's Party of Democratic Action of Sandžak (SDA).

[16][17] The SPP gave outside support to Serbia's coalition government led by the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) in the 2016–20 parliament.

Fehratović did not have any committee assignments in this sitting of the assembly, although he was a member of parliamentary friendship groups with Austria, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Russia, and Switzerland.

[18] As religious fundamentalists opposed to the public recognition of LGBT rights, Zukorlić and Fehratović absented themselves from the assembly during the confirmation vote for the openly lesbian Ana Brnabić to become Serbia's prime minister in June 2017.

[28] In the parliament that followed, he was for a time the leader of a parliamentary group comprising the SPP, the United Peasant Party (USS), and the Democratic Alliance of Croats in Vojvodina (DSHV).

Fehratović resigned from the SPP on 4 May 2023, charging that the party had abandoned its founding principles in favour of trivial short-term politics a based on a reactive populism.

[30] In October 2023, Fehratović announced that he was founding a new political group called the Party of the Future and Development (Stranka budućnosti i razvoja, SBR).

Fehratović also appeared in the largely symbolic twenty-sixth and final position on the Coalition for Peace and Tolerance's list in Novi Pazar in the 2023 Serbian local elections.