It's nice Dacic said there was no need for extraordinary elections when there is a stable majority in the assembly. That's why there won't be any.
In the best case for the supreme being and his team, the elections would be uncertain at this moment, and he (the being) does not organize the elections if there is even a theoretical chance of not winning them.
Because of this, he will continue to destroy this country and its citizens, especially the Universities - now he has come up with a yes Leave the faculties without electricity., for example - hoping that, sooner or later, he will regain control over the rebellious citizens, and then organize, as before, fake elections.
That's why that part opposition who would first like better election conditions, and then the elections, can relax and continue complaining about injustice.
Certain problems
There are, however, certain problems for the supreme being that can be seen with the naked eye every day, at every step, and the big question is whether reckless propaganda succeeds in patching it up.
His lack of compassion and perfect callousness now stings the eyes of his fans as well - he didn't even look back at the horror in "The Pond" from two years ago.
Tried to occupy DIF in Novi Sad, but failed. In America, someone ran him over just like that (it will be hilarious when we find out who and how).
He goes to Russia while the students are noticeably scurrying around Europe, and geography is not in his favor: regardless of the Kremlin's long tentacles, that Red Square is far away.
In addition, Putin, at the reception (or whatever), seated him in the seventh row on the left, even worse than his friend Macron on the Champs Elysées. And even his friend Orban did not dare to jump to Moscow.
At the same time, Europe, from which he receives huge amounts of money, is sending him very unpleasant signs, while in Mladenovac, the entire reconstructed roof fell off the building and only by crazy luck did not kill anyone.
In the center of Belgrade, he installed umbrellas that don't impress anyone, but that's why the already congested Belgrade is additionally suffocating both physically and symbolically.
He is increasingly incoherent (it is true, however, that he could never boast of coherence): Here in Moscow he declared that he would not read some kind of answer to someone, but from his head, because until now, as we have noted, he had mostly read his daily collected speeches from reputable television stations.
So, he is almost unable to take a step without tripping. And even when he doesn't make it - like the heartless silence on May 3 - it sounds hollow, uncomfortable, hopeless.
There is no going back
In other words, he will never regain the control he had before the fall of the canopy: he has nothing and no one over whom. Things have changed irreversibly.
In fact, he relies on the local elections in Kosjerić and Zaječar, and we should not for a single minute forget that he has been showering this country with heavy poisons for 13 years, especially in the provinces (that is, in Kosjerić and Zaječar), and that detoxification is a very long and, for the poisoned, extremely painful process.
Bright student processions and impressive receptions are not a guarantee that these cities will be freed in the elections. (We will remember the "king of the squares" Vuk Drašković from the beginning of the nineties and his cry after the lost elections: "So where have you been!?" The mass of people before whom he spoke was impressive and encouraging, but Milosevic won the elections.)
Only the smart and fierce work of the opposition parties on the ground (without party markings) helps here.
Smart: unite and launch mechanisms to prevent theft, starting from monitoring polling stations, through control of voter lists, preparing defenses against Essen beaters, to recognizing state and judicial institutions that do not work in the interests of citizens.
Fierce: every day, all day, going door to door, being visible, figuring out how to get messages across, because (ladies and gentlemen) nobody is tired.