<p>Montenegro's ruling party was projected to hold a narrow lead after a tight election, but could be knocked from power for the first time in three decades if opposition camps unite, unofficial results suggested Sunday.</p>.<p>Exit polls put the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) led by President Milo Djukanovic in line for a little over a third of the vote share, which would be its worst electoral showing since independence.</p>.<p>The pro-West party was set to hold 30 seats in the 81-member assembly, followed by 27 for the pro-Serb opposition "For the Future of Montenegro" alliance, according to partial results from election monitor CeMI.</p>.<p>If the opposition joined forces with two other leading blocs, they could oust DPS in what would be a political earthquake for the small Adriatic nation of 6,20,000 people.</p>.<p>The DPS has never lost an election, having led Montenegro since the collapse of Yugoslavia in the 1990s to independence from Serbia in 2006, and more recently into NATO.</p>.<p>But this year they faced a stiff challenge from an emboldened right-wing and pro-Serb camp that wants closer links with Belgrade and Moscow.</p>.<p>"DPS is at an all-time low," Milka Tadic Mijovic, director of Center for Investigative journalism (CIN), said as the results trickled in.</p>.<p>She attributed the weak showing to the party's "violation of basic democratic principles" as well as the passing of a law that sparked intense controversy with the influential Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC).</p>.<p>Passed in late 2019, the religion law paved the way for hundreds of SPC-run monasteries in Montenegro to become state property.</p>.<p>It ignited huge anti-government protests, led by priests and backed by the pro-Serb opposition who accuse Djukanovic of trying to steal Serb heritage.</p>.<p>While Montenegro declared independence from Serbia in 2006, the SPC remains its largest religious institution and a third of the country's population identify as Serb.</p>.<p>Speaking at the party's headquarters, President Djukanovic called for the country to wait until official results were announced, expected Monday.</p>.<p>"DPS is the strongest party in Montenegro," he said, insisting that the party could have a total of 40 seats with traditional allies and that the "struggle for the majority is still on."</p>.<p>But Zdravko Krivokapic, the leader of the main pro-Serb alliance, announced triumphantly that "the regime has fallen", while supporters celebrated in the streets of Podgorica.</p>.<p>Leaders of the other main opposition parties were also ecstatic, with Dritan Abazovic from the liberal 'Black on White' party declaring that "Mafia will no longer rule Montenegro".</p>.<p>It remains to be seen if the opposition, who range from far-right Serb nationalists to a civic-minded liberal camp, can forge a working alliance.</p>.<p>Djukanovic, who is now serving his second term as president after four stints as premier, is chief of the DPS party. He will not face election himself until 2023.</p>.<p>While he has won plaudits for making Montenegro a front-runner in the Balkans on its path to joining the EU, Djukanovic's critics accuse him turning Montenegro into a personal fiefdom built on graft and crime links.</p>.<p>The US-based Freedom House rights group recently downgraded Montenegro from a democracy to a "hybrid regime" under Djukanovic's "strongman" rule.</p>.<p>During the last parliamentary poll in 2016, authorities claimed to have foiled a coup plot -- allegedly with Russian help -- aimed at preventing Montenegro from joining NATO.</p>.<p>Among the 20 arrested, mostly ethnic Serbs, were two opposition leaders later sentenced to five years in prison, which they are appealing.</p>
<p>Montenegro's ruling party was projected to hold a narrow lead after a tight election, but could be knocked from power for the first time in three decades if opposition camps unite, unofficial results suggested Sunday.</p>.<p>Exit polls put the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) led by President Milo Djukanovic in line for a little over a third of the vote share, which would be its worst electoral showing since independence.</p>.<p>The pro-West party was set to hold 30 seats in the 81-member assembly, followed by 27 for the pro-Serb opposition "For the Future of Montenegro" alliance, according to partial results from election monitor CeMI.</p>.<p>If the opposition joined forces with two other leading blocs, they could oust DPS in what would be a political earthquake for the small Adriatic nation of 6,20,000 people.</p>.<p>The DPS has never lost an election, having led Montenegro since the collapse of Yugoslavia in the 1990s to independence from Serbia in 2006, and more recently into NATO.</p>.<p>But this year they faced a stiff challenge from an emboldened right-wing and pro-Serb camp that wants closer links with Belgrade and Moscow.</p>.<p>"DPS is at an all-time low," Milka Tadic Mijovic, director of Center for Investigative journalism (CIN), said as the results trickled in.</p>.<p>She attributed the weak showing to the party's "violation of basic democratic principles" as well as the passing of a law that sparked intense controversy with the influential Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC).</p>.<p>Passed in late 2019, the religion law paved the way for hundreds of SPC-run monasteries in Montenegro to become state property.</p>.<p>It ignited huge anti-government protests, led by priests and backed by the pro-Serb opposition who accuse Djukanovic of trying to steal Serb heritage.</p>.<p>While Montenegro declared independence from Serbia in 2006, the SPC remains its largest religious institution and a third of the country's population identify as Serb.</p>.<p>Speaking at the party's headquarters, President Djukanovic called for the country to wait until official results were announced, expected Monday.</p>.<p>"DPS is the strongest party in Montenegro," he said, insisting that the party could have a total of 40 seats with traditional allies and that the "struggle for the majority is still on."</p>.<p>But Zdravko Krivokapic, the leader of the main pro-Serb alliance, announced triumphantly that "the regime has fallen", while supporters celebrated in the streets of Podgorica.</p>.<p>Leaders of the other main opposition parties were also ecstatic, with Dritan Abazovic from the liberal 'Black on White' party declaring that "Mafia will no longer rule Montenegro".</p>.<p>It remains to be seen if the opposition, who range from far-right Serb nationalists to a civic-minded liberal camp, can forge a working alliance.</p>.<p>Djukanovic, who is now serving his second term as president after four stints as premier, is chief of the DPS party. He will not face election himself until 2023.</p>.<p>While he has won plaudits for making Montenegro a front-runner in the Balkans on its path to joining the EU, Djukanovic's critics accuse him turning Montenegro into a personal fiefdom built on graft and crime links.</p>.<p>The US-based Freedom House rights group recently downgraded Montenegro from a democracy to a "hybrid regime" under Djukanovic's "strongman" rule.</p>.<p>During the last parliamentary poll in 2016, authorities claimed to have foiled a coup plot -- allegedly with Russian help -- aimed at preventing Montenegro from joining NATO.</p>.<p>Among the 20 arrested, mostly ethnic Serbs, were two opposition leaders later sentenced to five years in prison, which they are appealing.</p>