After Sunday's elections, members of the DS party, led by Serbian President Boris Tadic, will head 26 municipalities, members of the SRS, led by UN war crimes tribunal indictee Vojislav Seselj, will be at the helm of 11 municipalities, the Socialist Party of Serbia, led by another tribunal indictee, Slobodan Milosevic, will head 15 municipalities, members of the Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS) of Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica will be heads of nine municipalities, while other parties will be at the helm of 48 municipalities.
As regards the province of Vojvodina, the DS will be at the helm of municipalities, Seselj's Radicals will head six municipalities, Milosevic's Socialists will be at the helm of three municipalities, and representatives of the Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians at the helm of two municipalities.
On Sunday, the second round of elections for the province's 120-seat assembly was held as well.
Candidates for 60 seats were elected according to the first-past-the post system. According to preliminary results, the DS won 21 seats, the SRS 18, Milosevic's Socialists one, and the Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians one seat.
Later in the day, the relevant election commission will say who has won the remaining 18 seats in the parliament.
In the first round of elections on 19 September, the SRS won 21 seats, the DS 15, the "Together for Vojvodina" coalition and the Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians each won six seats, and the SPS, Kostunica's DSS and the "Serbia's Strength Movement" each four seats. The first round of the polls was carried out in line with the proportional representation system.
The only political party of ethnic Croats, the Democratic Alliance of Vojvodina Croats (DSHV), will have one representative in the parliament, Duje Runje.
Besides, the DSHV will have five councillors in the assembly of Vojvodina's second largest city, Subotica, and two councillors in the assembly of the town of Sombor.