He left the Radicals in July 2020 and is now the leader of the Love, Faith, Hope (Ljubav, vera, nada, LJVN) political movement.
[15] In a 2006 interview with the Mexican newspaper Reforma, he said that the Radical Party was not against Serbia joining the European Union (EU) but would not accept the price of giving up sovereignty over Kosovo.
[22][23] Ultimately, they were not: the Socialists chose instead to form coalitions at both the republic and city levels with the For a European Serbia (ZES) alliance led by the DS.
In July 2008, Šarović led a protest march in Belgrade's Vozdovac municipality against the arrest of former Bosnian Serb political leader Radovan Karadžić.
"[32] During this period, Šarović also served as an adviser to Radical Party leader Vojislav Šešelj, who was then himself facing war crimes charges at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague, Netherlands.
[36] Serbia's electoral system was reformed in 2011, such that all assembly mandates were awarded to candidates on successful lists in numerical order.
[42][43][44] In 2013, Šarović led protests against the negotiations for the Brussels Agreement, which normalized some relations between Belgrade and Priština without addressing the status of Kosovo.
[45] After the agreement was finalized, deputy prime minister Aleksandar Vučić remarked that Šarović had sent him several threatening messages from his personal phone.
[48] After the election, Šarović and Nataša Jovanović represented the Radical Party in pro forma discussions with president Tomislav Nikolić on the formation of a new government.
The Radical delegation used their consultation session to demand that Nikolić resign, and the meeting was reported to have ended after thirty seconds.
He was issued a ten-year sentence but not required to serve any prison time as he had already spent more than ten years in custody at The Hague.
[53] Šarović received the seventh position on the SRS's list in the 2020 Serbian parliamentary election, in which the Radicals once again fell below the electoral threshold.
[57] Šarović said in September 2021 that the Taliban's return to power in Afghanistan after the withdrawal of American forces demonstrated that it was "disastrous" for countries to become aligned with the United States of America.
[58] Šarović appeared in the lead position on the electoral list of Love, Faith, Hope in the 2022 Belgrade city assembly election.
In May 2022, Vojislav Šešelj received a summons to appear before the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (IRMCT; the successor body to the ICTY) to respond to charges concerning the publication of classified information and the names of protected witnesses.
[62] In March 2024, he said that he was undecided about participating in the 2024 Belgrade city assembly election but that he was generally opposed to large multi-party electoral coalitions.
[64] He took part in protests against the Serbian government in late 2024 following the Novi Sad railway station canopy collapse that killed fifteen people.