According to the post, Crnadak was not overly satisfied with what was said and agreed upon at the meeting, believing the focus was on the wrong things.
"The first opposition meeting did not bring optimism for the average citizen of Republika Srpska who sincerely wants the situation in society to change. The main messages should have been about discussing which laws the new government will first enact, which scandals we will demand be processed first, how we will guarantee people a better life than today, and how we will protect them from corruption and uneducated, arrogant individuals. Instead, the messages revolved around the struggle for positions and the perception that there is not enough unity for a joint performance," he said.
Crnadak noted that this is a special moment for the opposition from Republika Srpska.
"In moments when there is turmoil within the SNSD, when members of the ruling coalition call each other 'monkeys,' a red alarm is triggered on the opposition side, and the coming days are our 'to be or not to be.' The differences are obviously huge, but the fact remains that only through a joint performance for the two key functions can we win," added Crnadak.
In this post, the PDP representative also invoked what he called the "Montenegrin scenario."
"It is true that we need a Montenegrin scenario, where the agreement was made by parties, associations, and people from a broad spectrum, from the late Metropolitan Amfilohije to Dritan Abazoviฤ, but we must know that all participants in the agreement were clear and explicit in guaranteeing that there would be no cooperation with Milo ฤukanoviฤ. We need a similar agreement," he wrote.
Finally, he called on all members and leaders of opposition parties to "calm the passions" and to "focus all efforts in the coming weeks exclusively on the main candidacies, which are the rallying point and demonstration of the desire for change."
"The early presidential elections showed that in Republika Srpska, we have a referendum atmosphere and that anything other than a direct 'one-on-one' clash with the regime represents a defeat for the opposition and kills even the little hope and faith among the people that change is possible and will happen in October," wrote Igor Crnadak.
