Commenting on Serbian Prime Minister Ivica Dacic's statement that Croatia was to blame for the worst relations between the two countries in recent years, Srb said "Serbia has more problems with itself and its Greater Serbia policy."
He said the HSP had been warning Croatian politicians for years that nothing had changed in Serbia's positions on Croatia and expressed its displeasure with the "big friendship" between Croatian President Ivo Josipovic and former Serbian President Boris Tadic.
The HSP supports the positions of the Catholic Church regarding the introduction of sex education in schools and reproaches the ruling coalition for giving more time to that issue and "the gay population than to real life problems, notably as more and more people are losing their jobs and living is increasingly hard," said Srb.
He announced that the HSP, a nonparliamentary party, wound run in next year's local elections with the newly established Independent Farmers of Croatia party, whose president, Mato Mlinaric, said this party would push for dealing with the agricultural issues. Mlinaric said it was unacceptable that Croatia imported as much as 65 per cent of food.
Asked by the press which other parties the HSP could form coalitions with, Srb said with all but the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and the Croatian Party of Rights Dr. Ante Starcevic.