Elections were held on 15 May 2005 in Zagreb, the capital of Croatia. Following the last local elections in 2001, Milan BandiÃÂ of the Social Democratic Party of Croatia (SDP) had been re-elected as the mayor of Zagreb. In 2002, an incident made him resign in favor of Deputy Mayor Vlasta PaviÃÂ, also from the SDP. PaviÃÂ remained formally in control of the city until 2005. In the 2005 elections, she was moved down the list of candidates to the 16th place, while the list holder and SDP's candidate for mayor was BandiÃÂ.
The elections mainly pitted two former mayors, BandiÃÂ of the SDP and Marina MatuloviÃÂ DropuliÃÂ of the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ). The SDP formed a coalition with the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS) and the Croatian Party of Pensioners (HSU), while the HDZ was in a coalition with the Democratic Centre (DC), the Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS), and the Croatian Demochristians (HD). The SDP gained 25 seats in the Zagreb Assembly, receiving 40.95% of the vote, with Milan BandiÃÂ winning his third term as the Zagreb mayor.
The Social Democratic Party of Croatia (SDP) ran with the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS) and the Croatian Party of Pensioners (HSU). Former Mayor Milan BandiÃÂ, who had to resign from his earlier term due to a driving under the influence scandal in 2002, was the list holder and the coalition's candidate for mayor. Vesna PusiÃÂ, the head of the Croatian People's Party (HNS), announced that the HNS won't be a member of the coalition due to the candidacy of BandiÃÂ. PusiÃÂ added that Milan BandiÃÂ is "at the top of each affair causing damage" to the city.
The SDP and the HNS were in coalition in the previous Assembly. Due to this breakup, the HNS ran together with the Liberal Party (LS), with PusiÃÂ as the list holder. The Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) entered a coalition with the Democratic Centre (DC), the Croatian Demochristians (HD), and the Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS).
The turnout at the election was 35%. The SDPâÂÂHSSâÂÂHSU coalition, led by incumbent Mayor Milan BandiÃÂ, won 41% of the vote and 25 out of 51 seats in the Zagreb Assembly. Bandiàwas elected mayor by the new Assembly and started his third term as the mayor of Zagreb. The HDZâÂÂDCâÂÂHSLSâÂÂHD coalition, with former Mayor Marina MatuloviàDropuliàas the list holder, won 9 seats, while the HSP list, led by Miroslav Roà ¾iÃÂ, finished third with 6 seats. The HNSâÂÂLS coalition won 8% of the vote and 4 seats, down from 12 in the 2001 elections. The LS was later incorporated into the HSLS.
Milan BandiÃÂ was elected mayor by the Assembly on 14 June 2005.
|- !align= center rowspan="2" colspan="2"|Parties and coalitions ! rowspan="2" |List holder ! colspan="3"| Popular vote ! colspan="2"| Seats |- align="center" !width="85"| Votes !width="50"| % !width="50"| ñpp !width="40"| Total !width="40"| +/â |- |bgcolor=| |align = left | Social Democratic Party of Croatia (SDP)<br>Croatian Peasant Party (HSS)<br>Croatian Party of Pensioners (HSU) |align = left | Milan Bandià|align = right | 102,857 |align = right | 40.95% |align="right" style="color:green;"| +13.88 |align = right | 25 |align = right style="color:green;"| +5 |- |bgcolor=| |align = left | Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ)<br>Democratic Centre (DC)<br>Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS)<br>Croatian Demochristians (HD) |align = left | Marina MatuloviàDropulià|align = right | 38,672 |align = right | 15.40% |align="right" style="color:red;"| âÂÂ4.51 |align = right | 9 |align = right style="color:red;"| âÂÂ5 |- |bgcolor=| |align = left | Croatian Party of Rights (HSP) |align = left | Miroslav Roà ¾ià|align = right | 28,534 |align = right | 11.36% |align = right | * |align = right | 6 |align = right | * |- |bgcolor=| |align = left | Croatian People's Party (HNS)<br>Liberal Party (LS) |align = left | Vesna Pusià|align = right | 20,368 |align = right | 8.11% |align = right style="color:red;"| âÂÂ9.43 |align = right | 4 |align = right style="color:red;"| âÂÂ8 |- |bgcolor=| |align = left | Independent list of Tatjana Holjevac |align = left | Tatjana Holjevac |align = right | 17,497 |align = right | 6.97% |align = right | New |align = right | 4 |align = right | New |- |bgcolor=| |align = left | Independent list of Boris Mikà ¡ià|align = left | Boris Mikà ¡ià|align = right | 14,807 |align = right | 5.90% |align="right" | New |align = right | 3 |align = right | New |- | | | align=left colspan=2 | Other lists |align = right | 28,415 |align = right | 11.31% |align = right | |align = right | 0 |align = right | |- | align=left colspan=3 style="background-color:#eaecf0" | Total: | align=right style="background-color:#eaecf0"| 251,150 | align=right style="background-color:#eaecf0"| | align=right style="background-color:#eaecf0"| | align=right style="background-color:#eaecf0"| 51 | align=right style="background-color:#eaecf0"| |- | align=left colspan=3 | Invalid votes: | align=right | 4,019 | align=right | 1.57% | align=right | | align=right | | align=right | |- | align=left colspan=3 | Turnout: | align=right | 255,321 | align=right | 35.94% | align=right style="color:red;"| âÂÂ3.85 | align=right | | align=right | |- | align=left colspan=3 | Registered voters: | align=right | 710,344 | align=right | | align=right | | align=right | | align=right | |- | colspan="8" align="left" | |- | colspan="8" align="left" | Source: City Election Committee |- | colspan="8" align="left" | Notes: