Youth Association of
Slovenia 1964-1967, president of the Association 1968-1969, member of
the secretariat of the Central Committee of the League of Communists
of Slovenia 1969 - 1973, secretary of the Socialist Alliance of Slovenia
1973-1978, President of the Assembly of Slovenia 1978-1982, representative
of the Republic of Slovenia in the Presidency of the Central Committee
of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia 1982-1986, President of the
Central Committee of the League of Communists of Slovenia 1986-1989.
In those years he was a member of numerous bodies and institutions,
including the Constitutional Commission of the Assembly of former Yugoslavia,
head of the working group dealing with the relationship between the
two autonomous provinces (Vojvodina and Kosovo Metohija), Serbia and
the Federation. In the first direct multi-party elections after 1945
he was elected and served as President of the Presidency of the Republic
of Slovenia 1990-1992, President of the Republic of Slovenia 1992-1997,
and President of the Republic of Slovenia again from 1997-2002.
Encyclopaedia
Characteristic of M.
Kucan's political activities are his analytical capabilities and level-headed
political views. These were particularly appreciated when he became
the leader of the LCS which, at that time, was still one of the key
factors of social impact. At a time of growing social crisis and the
gradual establishment of political pluralism in the late eighties, Milan
Kucan strongly influenced the transformation and adjustment of the LCS
to democratic trends. He also championed such endeavours of the LCS
at the level of the Communist League of Yugoslavia. When they were rejected
at the extraordinary 14th LCY Congress, Milan Kucan supported the complete
withdrawal of the LCS from the LCY. By assuming the role of reformer
in the LCS - and with its transformation into the Party of Democratic
Renewal - and by championing parliamentary democracy, political pluralism,
national sovereignty and everything which is the hallmark of a civil
and environmentally conscious society, Milan Kucan became one of the major
personalities of Slovene democratic and political emancipation. He was
active in seeking solutions to the Yugoslav crisis and a democratic
rearrangement of the country into a community of sovereign states; when
this was no longer possible, he supported the separation of Slovenia
from Yugoslavia by agreement. He remained loyal to his views when the
disintegrating SFRY attacked Slovenia after Slovenia had declared independence
on 26 June 1991, and was later active in Slovenia's endeavours for international
recognition./Encyclopaedia of Slovenia, Volume 6, Published by Mladinska
knjiga, Ljubljana, 1992/
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