[1] The immediate cause of the split was the dissidents' support for the Serbian government's temporary blockade of the Republika Srpska, which the Radical Party strongly opposed.
[2] The SNS-NP was officially constituted on 27 January 1995 by a merger of the federal caucus with a number of Radical Party dissidents in the National Assembly of Serbia.
[3] In July 1995, the SRS-NP issued a statement accusing Radical Party members Stevo Dragišić and Aleksandar Vučić of attacking Glamočanin on a Belgrade street.
[4] Balkan specialist Robert Thomas has written that the SRS-NP group in the federal assembly was widely seen as acting under the influence of the Serbian government and that the party ultimately aligned itself with Slobodan Milošević's administration.
[5] According to testimony from Glamočanin's former bodyguard, the SRS-NP leader was subsequently induced to support changes to Serbia's electoral laws, and the removal of Dragoslav Avramović as governor of the National Bank of Yugoslavia, with gifts of a flat, a luxury car, and fifty thousand German marks.