Branka Stamenković

Branka Stamenković (Serbian Cyrillic: Бранка Стаменковић; born 1968) is a politician in Serbia. She has served in the National Assembly of Serbia since 2016 as a member of the It's Enough – Restart (Dosta je bilo, DJB) association, better known in English by the name "Enough Is Enough."

Early life and career

Stamenković is a translator, working in the fields of popular psychology and astrology.[1] She has worked as an astrologer.[2][3] Stamenković was a student of the Sophia Centre for the Study of Cosmology in Culture and a graduate student at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. She also launched the "Mother's Courage" initiative to improve conditions in Serbian maternity hospitals. She lives in Belgrade.[4]

Political career

Stamenković received the tenth position on the DJB electoral list in the 2014 Serbian parliamentary election.[5] The list did not cross the electoral threshold to win representation in the assembly.

She received the thirteenth position on the DJB list in the 2016 election and was on this occasion elected when the list won sixteen mandates. The election was won by the Serbian Progressive Party and its allies, and the DJB serves in opposition.[6]

Following a series of splits within the DJB, Stamenković and former leader Saša Radulović were left as the movement's only remaining members of the assembly in November 2018. Stamenković was selected by DJB's main board to become its interim leader.[7]

Stamenković is currently a member of the assembly's culture and information committee; a member of the committee on labour, social issues, social inclusion, and poverty reduction; a member of the health and family committee; a member of the European integration committee; a member of the committee on administrative, budgetary, mandate, and immunity issues; a deputy member of the committee on human and minority rights and gender equality, the environmental protection committee, and the committee on the rights of the child; a member of Serbia's delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (where she serves as an independent member);[8] a member of Serbia's delegation to the parliamentary assembly of the Francophonie; and a member of the parliamentary friendship groups with Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Norway, South Africa, Sweden, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America.[9]

gollark: The page appears to be paywalled, and specific implementations are different to the cryptography itself.
gollark: Probably they'd only give them to *domestic* governments, at least, which is something.
gollark: Well, yes, it's entirely possible for the VPN provider to be being evil.
gollark: No, I mean they can't do it at all. A bruteforce attack on the stuff involved is not actually practical.
gollark: It would also probably still require more computing power than is practical to just do it to *everyone*.

References

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