The ruling Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) will receive 20.2 million, the strongest opposition party, the Social Democrats, 10.5 million, the People's Party/Liberal Democrats 3.7 million, the Peasant Party 2.7 million, the Party of Rights 2.1 million, and the Istrian Democratic Party 1.2 million.
The Pensioners Party and the Independent Democratic Serb Party will each receive 900,100 kuna, the Social Liberals 630,100 kuna, and the Liberal Party, which has one MP, 333,400 kuna.
Minority representative Zdenka Cuhnil will receive 330,000 kuna, while the Democratic Centre, the Party of Democratic Action, the Primorje/Gorski Kotar Alliance, minority representatives Furio Radin, Nikola Mak and Jene Adam, and independent deputy Ivo Loncar will each receive 300,000 kuna.
Ivo Banac and Zeljko Pavlic, who left the Liberal Party and Libra this month and became independent deputies, will each receive 266,700 kuna. Slaven Letica, another independent MP, will receive 262,500 kuna, while the Zagorje Democratic Party will receive 16,600 kuna.
The allocation of budgetary funds to independent deputies last year upset the opposition, which said the ruling HDZ was buying their votes. The Constitutional Court
ruled there was no obstacle to giving minority and independent members of Parliament money for their work in line with the Political Parties Act.