Although it served in opposition to the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) on provincial level, VF was part of the local SNS-led government in Novi Sad until 2023.
[4] VF was officially formalised on 7 November 2019; Čanak, Odžić, and Tomislav Žigmanov, the president of the Democratic Alliance of Croats in Vojvodina (DSHV), were one of the signatories.
[12] A month later, in April, VF formed a parliamentary group in the National Assembly with S21, named "Vojvodina Front–Serbia 21".
[13] Its members included Čanak, Nada Lazić, and Olena Papuga from LSV,[a] Žigmanov from DSHV, and Marko Đurišić and Nenad Konstantinović from S21.
[13] In the parliamentary election, UDS did not cross the 3 percent electoral threshold and lost all of its seats in the National Assembly.
[17] According to non-governmental organisation Transparency Serbia, VF spent around €24,000 in billboard and poster advertisements during the campaign period.
[18] After the elections in Novi Sad, LSV remained a member of the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS)-led local government in Novi Sad, however, VF declined to give its support for the provincial government led by SNS.
[28][29] VF has also called for the government to help entrepreneurs, small business owners, and agricultural producers during the state of emergency that was proclaimed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
[7] For the 2020 provincial election, LSV, VP, and DSHV were also joined by ZZV, CP, and the Democratic Bloc.