Zoran Zaev is a North Macedonian economist and politician who served as Prime Minister from June 2017 to January 2020 and again from August 2020 to January 2022.[1]
As leader of the center-left Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) from 2013 to December 2021, Zaev previously held the position of mayor of Strumica for three terms from 2005 to 2016.[1]
His governments prioritized foreign policy breakthroughs, most notably the Prespa Agreement signed with Greece in June 2018, which resolved a decades-long dispute over the country's name—changing it to North Macedonia—and enabled NATO membership in March 2020.[2][1]
Zaev also pursued judicial and anti-corruption reforms to advance EU accession talks, though these efforts faced setbacks from Bulgarian vetoes over historical and linguistic issues, alongside domestic economic stagnation and political polarization.[3][4]
Earlier, in 2015, Zaev released wiretapped recordings implicating the prior government in abuses, contributing to its downfall but sparking debates over the legality and ethics of such disclosures.[5]
Zaev resigned following electoral defeats in 2021, amid criticisms of inconsistent reforms and failure to deliver promised prosperity, leading to a shift in power.[6][3]
Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Zoran Zaev was born on October 8, 1974, in Strumica, North Macedonia, to parents Pance Zaev, a trader who sold peppers across the border in Serbia, and Trajanka Zaev.[7][8] His family originated from the rural village of Murtino in the Strumica municipality, reflecting a background tied to southeastern North Macedonia's agricultural and trading communities.[7]The Zaev family resided in Murtino during Zaev's early infancy before relocating to Strumica when he was approximately four years old, exposing him to both village life and urban opportunities in the regional center.[7] This move aligned with his father's cross-border commerce activities, which involved modest ventures like selling spices and produce, indicative of a working-class upbringing in a post-Yugoslav economic context emphasizing family-based entrepreneurship.[9] Zaev's name derived from a personal connection of his father's to an individual from Gornji Milanovac, Serbia, underscoring familial ties across regional borders.[7]Zaev grew up in a household connected to local commerce, later reflected in the family-run business "Trgoprodukt" in Strumica, which dealt in food products such as ajvar, a traditional Balkan pepper relish, highlighting an upbringing rooted in practical economic activities rather than elite or academic lineages.[10][9] Claims of Albanian ethnic descent in Zaev's ancestry have circulated in political discourse, often tied to his Orthodox Christian heritage and Strumica's mixed demographics, but Zaev has primarily identified with Macedonianethnicity amid such narratives.[11]
Academic and initial professional experience
Zaev enrolled at the Faculty of Economics at Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje in 1993 and graduated with a bachelor's degree in economics in 1997.[12][13] He subsequently pursued postgraduate studies at the same institution, earning a master's degree in monetary economics.[14]After completing his undergraduate degree, Zaev commenced his professional career in the private sector in his hometown of Strumica, initially working at Trgoprodukt, a family-owned trading company involved in commerce, including food products such as ajvar.[8][10][15] He remained with the firm from 1997 until 2003, during which time he advanced to a managerial role and eventually became an owner of the business.[8][10] This period marked his initial foray into entrepreneurship amid North Macedonia's post-independence economic transition, focusing on local trade rather than public sector or academic pursuits.[8]
Entry into politics
Local government roles
Zoran Zaev was elected mayor of Strumica Municipality in the 2005 local elections, becoming the youngest mayor in the Republic of Macedonia at the time.[14] He assumed office on 22 March 2005 and served continuously until 22 December 2016, completing three consecutive terms following re-elections in 2009 and 2013.[16][17]Under Zaev's administration, Strumica gained recognition for environmental policies and initiatives, earning national and European Union-wide accolades.[14] The municipality received Macedonia's highest national environmental award in both 2008 and 2009.[17] Zaev himself was awarded the Council of EuropeBest Practice Award for excellence in local governance during his tenure.[18] These accomplishments positioned Strumica as one of the most successful municipalities in southeastern Macedonia, with emphasis on sustainable development and administrative efficiency.[19]Zaev's local leadership focused on infrastructure improvements, economic projects, and community services, though specific quantifiable outcomes such as budget growth or project completions were not independently verified in available records from his bios. He transitioned from the mayoral role to national opposition leadership in the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) amid the 2015–2016 political crisis, effectively ending his direct involvement in local government.[16] No other local government positions are recorded prior to or during his mayoralty.
Rise within SDSM
Zaev joined the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) in 1996.[1] He entered national politics as a member of the Assembly of the Republic of Macedonia representing SDSM, holding the seat from 2003 until 2005.[20] In 2006, he was elected vice president of the SDSM Central Committee, a position he retained until 2013.[21]Following the election of Branko Crvenkovski as president of Macedonia in May 2009, Zaev assumed the role of acting SDSM president in September 2008 to lead the party through the transition.[22][21] His interim tenure ended amid a corruption investigation related to his time as mayor of Strumica, prompting his resignation from party leadership in late 2008; he was later acquitted of charges in 2013.[18] Despite this setback, Zaev continued as vice president and rebuilt influence within the party, focusing on internal reforms and opposition to the ruling VMRO-DPMNE government.Zaev's ascent culminated in his election as SDSM president in 2013, defeating challengers in an internal party vote and consolidating control ahead of the 2016 parliamentary elections.[23][18] Under his leadership, SDSM positioned itself as a pro-European alternative, emphasizing anti-corruption efforts and judicial independence, which gained traction during the 2015 wiretapping scandal that eroded public support for the incumbent administration.[21] This period marked Zaev's transformation from a regional figure to the party's dominant national leader, setting the stage for SDSM's coalition-building and eventual government formation in 2017.
Opposition leadership and 2015–2016 crisis
Challenges to Gruevski government
Zoran Zaev assumed leadership of the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) in October 2013, positioning himself as a key opponent to Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski's VMRO-DPMNE government, which had held power since 2006 and faced accusations of authoritarian tendencies, electoral irregularities, and media control.[24] Under Zaev's direction, the opposition intensified scrutiny following the disputed April 2014 parliamentary elections, where SDSM alleged widespread voter intimidation and fraud, prompting a partial boycott of the legislature by opposition lawmakers.[25]The primary challenge emerged in February 2015 when Zaev launched the "Truth about Macedonia" initiative, publicly releasing audio recordings—termed "bombs" by the opposition—that purportedly captured senior government officials discussing illegal activities, including the unlawful wiretapping of over 20,000 citizens, political rivals, journalists, and foreign diplomats.[26][27][28] Zaev claimed these intercepts, spanning from 2008 to 2015, evidenced systemic abuse of the secret services by Gruevski's administration to suppress dissent and manipulate elections, such as covering up a 2014 political murderinvestigation involving Interior Minister Gordana Jankuloska.[29][24] The government dismissed the tapes as fabrications or selectively edited materials possibly sourced from foreign intelligence, while counter-charging Zaev in January 2015 with attempting to extort Gruevski into calling snap elections through blackmail.[30][25]These revelations triggered widespread protests in Skopje and other cities starting in May 2015, with Zaev mobilizing demonstrators against alleged government-orchestrated ethnic tensions between Macedonians and Albanians, as exposed in the tapes, and demanding Gruevski's resignation.[31] The unrest, coupled with international pressure from the EU and U.S., escalated into a constitutional crisis, paralyzing governance and prompting EU Commissioner Johannes Hahn to mediate the Pržino Agreement on July 15, 2015.[32] Signed by Gruevski, Zaev, and other leaders, the accord mandated Gruevski's temporary resignation by January 2016, the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the wiretaps, judicial and electoral reforms, and snap elections by April 2016 (later delayed to December).[32][24] Despite these concessions, implementation faltered amid mutual accusations of non-compliance, sustaining political deadlock through 2016.[33]
Wiretapping revelations and color revolution
In February 2015, Zoran Zaev, leader of the opposition Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM), began releasing excerpts from thousands of intercepted phone conversations, alleging that Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski's government had orchestrated a massive illegal surveillance operation targeting over 20,000 individuals, including opposition figures, journalists, judges, and foreign diplomats.[26][34] Zaev dubbed these disclosures "information bombs," claiming they exposed corruption, electoral fraud, abuse of power, and interference in judicial processes, such as the destruction of a political opponent's building and manipulation of media coverage.[35][36] Gruevski's administration denied the allegations, asserting that Zaev had obtained the materials through blackmail attempts during private meetings in September and November 2014, where Zaev allegedly demanded snap elections or government concessions in exchange for suppressing the tapes, sourced from unidentified "patriots" within state institutions.[26][37]The revelations intensified Macedonia's political crisis, already strained by disputed 2014 elections boycotted by SDSM over fraud claims.[36] In May 2015, authorities indicted Zaev and associates on charges of illegal wiretapping, extortion, and inciting a coup, prompting widespread protests demanding Gruevski's resignation and an end to alleged authoritarianism.[38][31] These demonstrations escalated into the "Colourful Revolution" by early 2016, characterized by daily non-violent actions where protesters hurled paint-filled balloons at government buildings to symbolize corruption's "colorful" exposure, drawing tens of thousands and persisting for over 50 days despite government counter-rallies.[39][40] Gruevski framed the unrest as a foreign-orchestrated coup, while Zaev positioned it as a grassroots push for accountability, leading to EU-brokered talks under the Pržino Agreement in July 2015, which established a transitional government and scheduled early elections for 2016.[41][42]The wiretapping affair prompted investigations, including by a special prosecutor who indicted over 90 officials in 2017 for abuses tied to the surveillance, though Zaev later testified in 2019 that he had urged Gruevski to resign voluntarily during four pre-publication meetings to avert escalation.[43][44] Critics of the opposition's tactics, including Gruevski allies, argued the selective leaks violated privacy and served partisan ends without full judicial verification, while supporters cited them as pivotal in eroding the ruling VMRO-DPMNE's legitimacy amid documented surveillance excesses.[38][45] The Colourful Revolution's momentum contributed to Gruevski's eventual resignation in January 2016, paving the way for Zaev's coalition victory in the April-May 2016 snap elections.[39]
First premiership (2017–2020)
Government formation and initial reforms
Following the December 11, 2016, parliamentary elections, in which the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) secured 49 seats amid a political deadlock, President Gjorge Ivanov initially awarded exploratory mandates to the largest party, VMRO-DPMNE (51 seats), and then to SDSM leader Zoran Zaev, but negotiations stalled over demands for institutional reforms stemming from the 2015 wiretapping scandal.[46] After the violent storming of parliament on April 27, 2017, by nationalist protesters opposing the election of ethnic Albanian speaker Talat Xhaferi, Ivanov relented and formally granted Zaev the mandate to form a government on May 17, 2017.[46][47]Zaev assembled a coalition comprising SDSM, the Democratic Union for Integration (DUI) with 10 seats, the Alliance for Albanians, BESA Movement, and smaller parties representing Turkish and Roma communities, achieving a parliamentary majority of approximately 67 seats.[48]The Assembly approved the 27-member cabinet on May 31, 2017, with Zaev sworn in as prime minister that day; a confidence vote passed 69-26 on June 1, 2017, ending the six-month crisis.[49][47] The coalition emphasized civic unity over ethnic divisions, with DUI leader Ali Ahmeti as deputy prime minister in charge of self-governance, though critics noted the inclusion of DUI—previously allied with VMRO-DPMNE—undermined claims of a clean break from prior governance issues.[49]In its initial priorities, the Zaev government targeted five reform areas: economic recovery, judicial independence, public administration efficiency, anti-corruption measures to recover misappropriated funds, and Euro-Atlantic integration to unblock EU accession talks halted since 2009.[50] Early actions included raising the minimum wage from 9,000 to 12,000 denars (about €146 to €195) by September 2017, reducing administrative fees for citizens, initiating depoliticization of state institutions like the intelligence agency, and advancing electoral and media reforms mandated by the 2015 Przino Agreement.[51][52] These steps aimed to restore rule-of-law standards eroded under the previous administration, though implementation faced resistance from opposition lawmakers and entrenched interests.[53]
Economic policies and performance
Zaev's government pursued a "Plan for Economic Growth" emphasizing foreign direct investment (FDI) attraction, innovation support, entrepreneurship promotion, and structural reforms to enhance competitiveness in anticipation of EU integration.[27][54] Policies included fiscal consolidation to maintain stability, with public debt held steady at approximately 40% of GDP through 2019, alongside efforts to streamline business regulations and leverage the 2018 Prespa Agreement to boost investor confidence.[55][56] The administration prioritized public-private partnerships and incentives for large-scale projects, announcing commitments from multinational firms in manufacturing and automotive sectors, though actual FDI inflows remained modest relative to ambitions.[57]Economic performance showed gradual improvement from a low post-2015 political crisis base, with real GDP growth accelerating to 3.6% in 2019 from 0.4% in 2017, driven by rising private consumption, investment, and exports.[58][59]Unemployment declined notably, from 22.9% in 2017 to 17.4% in 2019, reflecting labor market absorption amid expansion, though structural mismatches and informal employment persisted.[60]
Year
GDP Growth (%)
Unemployment Rate (%)
Public Debt (% of GDP)
2017
0.4
22.9
~38
2018
2.7
21.2
40.4
2019
3.6
17.4
40.5
Data compiled from World Bank and IMF sources.[58][60][55]Despite these gains, outcomes fell short of Zaev's pledges for a "major economic upturn," including only 36,000 new jobs created against a target of 100,000 by term's end, with persistent challenges like low productivity and reliance on remittances limiting transformative impact.[61][62] International assessments noted fiscal prudence but highlighted the absence of deep reforms to address high unemployment legacies and external vulnerabilities.[59]
Domestic social and judicial reforms
Zaev's government, formed on May 31, 2017, prioritized judicial reforms to depoliticize the judiciary and combat entrenched corruption, aligning with European Union recommendations from the Priebe reports that highlighted systemic interference under the prior administration.[48][63] The administration launched a Judicial Reform Strategy, establishing mechanisms such as a monitoring council to oversee implementation and address issues like selective prosecution and judicial capture.[64]Key legislative changes in 2018 revised standards for appointing and dismissing judges and prosecutors, empowering the newly formed Judicial Council—the highest self-governing body—as an independent overseer to reduce political influence.[65][63] A major package of 21 laws was approved by parliament on February 16, 2020, focusing on vetting procedures, case backlog reduction, and enhanced accountability, which the government promoted through the "Walk for Justice" rally attended by thousands in Skopje the following day.[66] These measures aimed to fulfill EU Urgent Reform Priorities, though international observers noted persistent challenges in execution, including incomplete judge vetting and ongoing perceptions of favoritism.[67]Anti-corruption efforts intertwined with judicial changes, with promises to prosecute prior regime figures, yet public and analyst assessments criticized the government for leniency toward allies, undermining trust in systemic change.[4][68] Social reforms received less emphasis amid EU accession focus, with policies targeting improved living standards through public administration streamlining and environmental protections, but lacking transformative overhauls in welfare or minority integration comparable to judicial initiatives.[69] Overall, while legal frameworks advanced modestly—contributing to slight democratic gains per independent evaluations—implementation gaps fueled skepticism about lasting impact on social cohesion and rule-of-law perceptions.[70][65]
Foreign policy: Greece name dispute and Prespa Agreement
Zaev's government, formed in June 2017, identified resolution of the Macedonia naming dispute with Greece—originating in 1991 and blocking NATO and EU accession—as a foreign policy priority to enable Euro-Atlantic integration.[71] Negotiations, mediated by the United Nations, accelerated under Zaev and Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, with Zaev reversing prior "antiquization" policies by removing controversial statues of ancient figures like Alexander the Great to build trust.[72]The resulting Prespa Agreement was signed on June 17, 2018, at Lake Prespa by Zaev and Tsipras, stipulating the country's constitutional name change to "Republic of North Macedonia" for all international and domestic uses (erga omnes), while affirming the Slavic Macedonian language and ethnicity distinct from ancient Macedonian (a Greekdialect) and prohibiting claims to Greekterritory or heritage.[71][73] The deal also mandated revisions to public symbols and education to avoid irredentist implications, addressing Greece's veto concerns.[74]Domestically, Zaev faced vehement opposition from nationalists, including the VMRO-DPMNE party, who decried the name change as a capitulation eroding national identity; protests erupted in Skopje, and President Gjorge Ivanov initially refused to countersign, citing constitutional violations.[75] A consultative referendum on September 30, 2018, saw 91% approval among voters but only 36.9% turnout, failing the 50% threshold for binding effect.[71] Zaev proceeded by securing a two-thirds parliamentary majority for constitutional amendments on January 11, 2019, after cross-party deals.[76]Greece's parliament ratified the agreement on January 25, 2019, by a 153-146 margin amid internal controversy, enabling the name change's entry into force on February 13, 2019, upon UN deposit.[77][73] Zaev hailed the resolution as unlocking NATO's invitation in July 2018, though critics argued it prioritized geopolitical gains over sovereignty without commensurate economic benefits from Greece.[78]
NATO accession process
Following the implementation of the Prespa Agreement, which resolved the long-standing naming dispute with Greece, NATO invited the Republic of North Macedonia to commence accession talks at the Brussels Summit on July 11, 2018.[79]NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg formally notified Prime Minister Zoran Zaev of the invitation via a signed letter, emphasizing the alliance's commitment to integrating the country once constitutional amendments renaming the state were enacted.[79] Zaev's government prioritized these reforms, securing parliamentary approval for the name change in January 2019 after a September 2018 referendum that, despite low turnout, provided political momentum.[80]The accession protocol was signed on February 6, 2019, marking a pivotal milestone that initiated the ratification phase by NATO's 29 member states.[81] Under Zaev's leadership, North Macedonia engaged in intensified diplomatic efforts to expedite ratifications, including high-level meetings such as Zaev's discussions with Stoltenberg in March 2019, where the Secretary General hailed the protocol's signing as historic.[82] By October 2019, 22 nations, including the United States following Senate approval on October 22, had ratified the protocol, with Zaev expressing optimism for full membership.[83][84]The process culminated on March 27, 2020, when North Macedonia deposited its instrument of accession in Washington, D.C., becoming the 30th NATO member.[80] Zaev attended the ceremony at NATO headquarters, where the flag was raised, crediting the achievement to years of reforms and international cooperation despite domestic opposition from nationalist groups.[85] This membership enhanced the country's security amid regional tensions, fulfilling a strategic goal pursued since 2008, though it proceeded independently of stalled EU accession talks.[86]
Bulgaria friendship treaty negotiations
Following his government's formation in May 2017, Prime Minister Zoran Zaev pursued improved bilateral relations with Bulgaria to facilitate North Macedonia's Euro-Atlantic integration, amid longstanding disputes over history, identity, and minority rights that had strained ties under the prior VMRO-DPMNE administration.[87] Negotiations, which built on earlier exploratory efforts but gained momentum under Zaev's pro-reform stance, focused on establishing frameworks for good-neighborly cooperation without delving into unresolved historical claims.[88]The resulting Treaty of Friendship, Good-Neighbourliness, and Cooperation was signed on August 1, 2017, in Skopje by Zaev and Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov.[89] Key provisions included Bulgaria's pledge to support North Macedonia's NATO and EU aspirations, mutual renunciation of territorial claims, enhanced economic ties through joint working groups, and commitments to protect ethnic minorities and promote cultural cooperation via bilateral commissions on history and education.[90] The agreement acknowledged a shared historical heritage while deferring deeper reconciliation to ongoing dialogues, reflecting a pragmatic approach to bilateral stability.[91]Ratification followed, with North Macedonia's parliament approving the treaty on January 15, 2018, after Bulgaria had already done so, enabling its entry into force.[92] Initial implementation emphasized economic projects and minority protections, though Bulgaria later cited incomplete adherence—particularly on historical narratives in education and media—as grounds for concerns, highlighting limits in the treaty's scope for resolving identity-based tensions.[93] Zaev's administration viewed the treaty as a foundational step toward regional reconciliation, aligning with broader foreign policy goals post-Prespa Agreement.[2]
Second premiership (2020–2022)
COVID-19 response and economic measures
Upon assuming office in August 2020 following the July parliamentary elections, Prime Minister Zoran Zaev's government continued and expanded COVID-19 containment measures initiated earlier in the year, including curfews, border closures, and restrictions on gatherings. A nationwide state of emergency, first declared in March 2020, was repeatedly extended through 2021, with additional localized lockdowns imposed, such as an 80-hour curfew in Skopje, Tetovo, Kumanovo, and Štip in June 2020 to curb rising cases. The Health Ministry under Venko Filipče introduced further restrictions in late 2020 and early 2021, including mandatory mask-wearing, limits on public events, and school closures during surges, amid criticism for delayed vaccine procurement. Zaev attributed vaccination delays to commitments under NATO's medical stockpile and Euro-Atlantic partnerships, with North Macedonia receiving assistance from NATO in October 2020 but facing shortages that slowed rollout, achieving only partial coverage by mid-2021.[94][95][96]To address economic fallout, the government implemented four stimulus packages totaling measures equivalent to significant fiscal support, with the fourth package adopted in February 2021 allocating 9.7 billion denars (approximately 158 million euros) for wage subsidies, liquidity aid to businesses, and social assistance. These included direct payments to vulnerable households, deferred tax obligations, and guarantees for loans to preserve employment, aimed at mitigating unemployment spikes and GDP contraction projected at 4% for 2020 by the IMF. Zaev's administration claimed the packages improved economic outcomes by 4.2 percentage points, facilitating a projected 4.1% growth in 2021 through boosted exports (14%) and investments (7.7%). However, public debt rose above 40% of GDP, reflecting the countercyclical spending's strain, while recovery remained uneven due to persistent tourism and service sector losses.[97][98][99]
Stalled EU accession and regional tensions
During Zoran Zaev's second premiership, North Macedonia's EU accession process faced significant obstacles, primarily from Bulgaria's veto imposed in November 2020 at the European Council. Bulgaria conditioned its support on North Macedonia's implementation of the 2017 Treaty of Friendship, Good Neighbourliness and Cooperation, demanding resolution of disputes over history, language, and identity through joint commissions and constitutional recognition of a Bulgarian minority.[100][101]Zaev's administration pursued bilateral talks with Sofia, emphasizing reconciliation and compliance with treaty provisions, while Zaev publicly affirmed a commitment to "good relations with Bulgaria" despite the impasse. However, tensions escalated over interpretive differences, including Bulgaria's rejection of the distinctiveness of the Macedonian language and ethnicity—views rooted in claims of shared Bulgarian heritage—and North Macedonia's insistence on its post-Yugoslav national identity. These disagreements manifested in controversies surrounding historical figures, such as Gotse Delchev, commemorated differently by each side, exacerbating bilateral strains.[102][93]Further delays arose in October 2021 when France blocked progress, citing insufficient reforms and regional stability concerns, prompting Zaev to express profound personal disappointment in interviews, stating he was "breaking inside" over the repeated setbacks.[103][104] The combined vetoes halted formal negotiation frameworks, despite prior advancements like NATO membership, and fueled domestic discontent with Zaev's pro-EU orientation, contributing to perceptions of governance failure amid unfulfilled integration promises.[105]Broader regional dynamics amplified these issues, with Bulgaria's stance reflecting domestic nationalist pressures and North Macedonia facing parallel identity-based frictions with neighbors like Serbia over Kosovo recognition and minority rights, though the EU process remained the central flashpoint. Zaev's government implemented some confidence-building measures, such as educational reforms acknowledging shared heritage, but these proved insufficient to lift the blockade before his resignation in January 2022.[106][107]
Electoral defeats and resignation
In the first round of North Macedonia's local elections on October 17, 2021, Zaev's Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) and its coalition partners secured victories in 27 municipalities, while the opposition VMRO-DPMNE-led bloc won 23, with runoffs needed in 30.[108][6]The second round on October 31, 2021, resulted in a decisive setback for SDSM, which lost control of several key cities including Skopje, Bitola, and Prilep to VMRO-DPMNE candidates, ultimately retaining mayoral positions in only about 20 of the 80 municipalities compared to over 50 after the 2017 locals.[109][108] This outcome was interpreted as a public rebuke of the government's handling of economic stagnation, corruption perceptions, and blocked EU accession amid disputes with Bulgaria.[110][111]On October 31, 2021, immediately following the runoff results, Zaev announced his immediate resignation as both Prime Minister and SDSM leader, stating that the electorate had delivered a "clear signal" demanding change and that he took full responsibility for the defeat.[112][111] Coalition partners, including the Democratic Union for Integration, urged him to reconsider to maintain government stability until parliamentary elections, but Zaev proceeded.[113]Zaev formally submitted his resignation to President Stevo Pendarovski on December 23, 2021, after internal party processes to select a successor, paving the way for Dimitar Kovačevski to assume the premiership on January 16, 2022, while Zaev remained an SDSM member without leadership roles.[114][115] The episode highlighted voter dissatisfaction with unfulfilled reform promises and external pressures, contributing to a caretaker-like transition amid ongoing coalition tensions.[6][4]
Post-premiership career
Party involvement and 2024 elections
Following his resignation as Prime Minister and SDSM leader in January 2022, Zoran Zaev retained membership in the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) but did not assume any formal leadership position within the party.[116][117] The SDSM leadership transitioned to Dimitar Kovačevski, who served as party president and Prime Minister heading into the 2024 elections. Zaev shifted focus to non-partisan initiatives, including founding the Zaev Foundation "One Society for All" in June 2022, though he continued to identify publicly as an SDSM supporter.[17][1]In the parliamentary elections held on May 8, 2024—concurrent with the presidential runoff—SDSM, as part of the "For European Future in Macedonia" coalition led by Kovačevski, suffered a significant defeat. The party-led bloc secured approximately 14.3% of the vote and 18 seats in the 120-seat Assembly, compared to 43.4% and 58 seats for the opposition VMRO-DPMNE-led "Your Macedonia" coalition.[118][119] Zaev did not participate actively in the campaign, with no reports of rallies, endorsements, or strategic roles on his part during the pre-election period. Opposition leader Hristijan Mickoski later criticized SDSM's governance legacy, including policies associated with Zaev's tenures, as a factor in voter rejection.[120]Post-election, Zaev attributed SDSM's loss to demotivation among progressive voters due to the European Union's unfulfilled commitments on North Macedonia's accession process, stating that the bloc had not advanced reforms or opened clusters as promised despite domestic concessions like the Prespa Agreement.[121] He emphasized that external factors, rather than internal party dynamics, contributed to the outcome, though he did not propose a return to active politics or leadership contention within SDSM.[121]
Public commentary and foundation work
Following his resignation as prime minister in January 2022, Zoran Zaev co-founded the Zaev Foundation in June 2022, serving as one of its directors.[1] The non-governmental, non-partisan, and non-profit organization focuses on charitable and humanitarian activities, emphasizing the promotion of a multi-ethnic society through North Macedonia's "One Society" concept and efforts to rebuild democratic institutions.[122] Its programs include initiatives aligned with international observances such as World Children's Day on November 20, International Day of Persons with Disabilities on December 3, and International Volunteer Day on December 5, alongside advocacy for unity among democratic and progressive forces, as articulated by Zaev at the Korčula School event in 2023.[123]Zaev has maintained a public presence through commentary on North Macedonia's foreign relations and EU integration. In November 2022, he welcomed the opening of a Macedonian language center in Greece as a positive development fostering bilateral ties under the Prespa Agreement.[124] On the sixth anniversary of the Prespa Agreement in June 2024, Zaev joined former Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras in urging adherence to the deal, highlighting its role in regional stability.[78]In a June 2024 interview, Zaev attributed the electoral demotivation of progressive voters to the European Union's failure to advance North Macedonia's accession process despite earlier commitments, arguing that unfulfilled promises eroded public support for pro-EU reforms.[121] He has positioned such critiques within a broader call for sustained Euro-Atlantic alignment to avert "existential dangers" from external influences, echoing his pre-resignation warnings about geopolitical vulnerabilities outside NATO and EU frameworks.[125]
Controversies and criticisms
Personal conduct incidents
In January 2015, Zoran Zaev, then leader of the opposition Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM), was charged with blackmail and violence against state officials by Macedonian prosecutors. The allegations centered on claims that Zaev had attempted to coerce Prime MinisterNikola Gruevski into dissolving parliament and calling snap elections during private meetings in September and November 2014, by threatening to disclose compromising wiretapped recordings of government figures.[126][30] Zaev denied the accusations, asserting that the meetings aimed to negotiate a caretaker government amid evidence of electoral irregularities and systemic abuses, and that the recordings—later dubbed the "bombs"—had been provided by a whistleblower to expose corruption rather than for extortion.[26] A Skopje court ordered Zaev to surrender his passport and report regularly to authorities as conditions of release.[126]The charges drew international condemnation as politically motivated retaliation, coinciding with Zaev's public release of audio tapes implicating Gruevski's government in wiretapping over 20,000 citizens, including political opponents, judges, and journalists, for surveillance and manipulation purposes.[127]European Union enlargement commissioner Johannes Hahn and other Western diplomats criticized the prosecution as an abuse of state institutions to silence dissent, exacerbating a constitutional crisis that led to the Pržino Agreement in July 2015.[128] Under the agreement, mediated by EU and U.S. officials, a special prosecutor was appointed to investigate the wiretappingscandal, and charges against Zaev were effectively shelved as part of broader judicial reforms and the government's commitment to transitional governance.[129] No conviction resulted, and Zaev later won elections in 2016, becoming prime minister.Additional charges against Zaev related to the wiretapping affair, including aiding unlawful data acquisition, were filed in April 2015 but similarly dismissed following the Pržino framework and international pressure, with investigations shifting focus to government figures implicated in the tapes.[129] Critics, including Gruevski's VMRO-DPMNE party, maintained that Zaev's tactics constituted unethical leverage of illegally obtained materials, potentially violating privacy and legal norms, though independent analyses, such as a 2015EU expert report, attributed primary responsibility for the scandal's origins to state security abuses under Gruevski.[130] No further personal conduct proceedings against Zaev were reported post-2015, distinguishing these events from later political corruption probes involving his administration.[4]
Exploitation of ethnic and historical narratives
Zaev's government faced accusations of undermining Macedonian historical narratives through concessions in the Prespa Agreement with Greece, signed on June 17, 2018, and ratified in both countries by January and February 2019, respectively. The accord required North Macedonia to renounce exclusive claims to ancient Macedonian heritage, stipulate that its citizens' self-identification as Macedonians did not imply connection to ancient Hellenic figures like Alexander the Great, and affirm that the Macedonian language is part of the Slavic family without ties to ancient Macedonian dialects. Critics, including opposition parties and nationalist groups, argued these provisions constituted a deliberate dilution of the national historical identity constructed around continuity with antiquity, accusing Zaev of prioritizing EU and NATO accession over cultural sovereignty.[131][132]Domestic backlash manifested in widespread protests, with demonstrators in Skopje and other cities labeling the agreement a "betrayal of national identity" and demanding Zaev's resignation for what they termed historical revisionism imposed externally. For instance, in September 2020, protests targeted government handling of historical commemorations, with participants accusing Zaev's administration of complicity in erasing Macedonian distinctiveness to appease Greek irredentist demands. Macedonian diaspora organizations, such as the Macedonian Human Rights Movement International, escalated rhetoric by calling for Zaev's arrest in September 2024, framing the name change and identity clauses as a U.S.-orchestrated derogation of sovereignty that exploited pro-Western aspirations to dismantle foundational narratives.[133][134]In relations with Bulgaria, Zaev's overtures further fueled claims of narrative exploitation. The 2017 Treaty of Friendship, Good-Neighborliness, and Cooperation committed North Macedonia to joint historical commissions, but Bulgaria's 2020 EU accession veto highlighted unresolved disputes over figures like Gotse Delchev, whom Bulgaria claims as exclusively Bulgarian. Zaev's November 25, 2020, interview with Bulgarian media, where he stated that "today I do not see Bulgaria as a fascist occupier" during World War II and advocated reevaluating shared history, provoked outrage in North Macedonia. Opposition leader Hristijan Mickoski and others condemned it as a capitulation that revised the established anti-fascist partisan narrative, accusing Zaev of instrumentalizing historical reconciliation for short-term diplomatic gains amid stalled EU talks.[135][136]Ethnic dimensions emerged in criticisms of Zaev's coalition with the Albanian Democratic Union for Integration (DUI), which implemented Ohrid Agreement provisions expanding bilingualism and minority rights, including Albanian-language signage and statues honoring Albanian historical figures in majority-Macedonian areas. Detractors from VMRO-DPMNE alleged this favored Albanian revisionist narratives—such as claims on medieval figures like Ali Pasha—over Macedonian ones, exacerbating inter-ethnic divides for electoral leverage in the 25% Albanian minority demographic. While Zaev defended these as stabilizing measures post-2001 conflict, skeptics viewed them as exploiting ethnic fault lines to consolidate power, diverting from governance failures.[137]
Corruption allegations and governance failures
Zaev faced corruption allegations stemming from his tenure as mayor of Strumica, where he was accused in 2013 of soliciting a bribe of approximately 200,000 euros from local businessman Ivan Nikollov Saçevalliev to facilitate the privatization of a state-owned property.[138][139] Prosecutors charged him with bribery, potentially carrying a sentence of up to five years in prison, but a Skopje court acquitted him in May 2018, ruling that the evidence did not prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.[138][140] Earlier, in 2008, Zaev had been sentenced on related corruption charges during his mayoral period, though subsequent legal proceedings led to the 2018 acquittal.[141]During his premiership from 2017 to 2022, Zaev's government drew criticism for failing to eradicate systemic corruption despite campaign promises to prosecute abuses exposed in prior wiretapping scandals.[4] Public perception held that the administration was lenient toward criminal elements, with ongoing impunity for officials in parliament and the judiciary.[4][142] In 2019, a racketeering scandal involving extortion of businessmen implicated associates of the ruling elite, though Zaev publicly denied personal involvement and claimed to have reported the complaints to prosecutors.[143][144] U.S. Treasury designations in 2023 highlighted corruption networks in North Macedonia, noting bribes received by Zaev's close ally Oliver Spasovski Rashkovski in connection with government contracts, underscoring persistent elite-level graft under Zaev's leadership.[145] Analyses of the period describe state capture, with the Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) engaging in practices that violated transparency norms and enabled illiberal control over institutions.[146][147]Governance failures compounded these issues, particularly in economic management, where promised reforms yielded limited results. Capital investment realization from the state budget remained low, prompting Zaev to assume direct control of the Finance Ministry in 2020 amid criticism from economists for inefficiencies.[148] Fiscal stability was maintained, but a major economic upturn failed to materialize, contributing to voter disillusionment.[61] The COVID-19 response was marred by delays in vaccine procurement and high excess mortality, ranking North Macedonia fourth globally in per capita deaths by late 2021, exacerbating unemployment and public health strains.[149][150] These shortcomings, alongside stalled anti-corruption efforts, factored into Zaev's resignation following electoral defeats in 2021, as intra-party divisions and unmet expectations eroded support.[4]