Kosovo parliament fails to elect president

Kosovo's parliament failed Tuesday evening to elect a new president due to a lack of two-thirds quorum from the opposition's boycott. This ends the current legislature and paves the way for new legislative elections within a maximum of 45 days. Parliament President Albulena Haxhiu is to dissolve the assembly Wednesday morning.

The vote to elect Vjosa Osmani's successor, whose mandate expired in early April, could not take place Tuesday evening. Although a theoretical majority existed, the opposition's boycott prevented reaching the required two-thirds quorum. "This session marked the end of the current legislature. Elections will be called within the constitutional deadlines," Parliament President Albulena Haxhiu declared at midnight.

Prime Minister Albin Kurti, leader of Vetëvendosje in power since 2021, formed a government in February after snap December elections where his party won 57 of 120 seats, allied with minority representatives. He urged the opposition to "end the blockade" in afternoon press conferences. "Blockages help neither institutions nor the state. Blocking Kosovo leads nowhere," he lamented.

This is not the first crisis: a March failure led to a dissolution annulled by the Constitutional Court, which granted an extension expiring at midnight Tuesday. The presidency, honorary for five years, is currently interim by the parliament president. Kosovo, home to 1.6 million mostly Albanian inhabitants, declared independence from Serbia in 2008.

相关文章

South Korean parliament chamber with empty opposition seats and frustrated ruling party members after failed constitutional amendment vote.
AI 生成的图像

South Korean parliament fails to pass constitutional amendment bill

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

A ruling party-led constitutional amendment bill failed to pass a parliamentary vote on May 7 after the main opposition party boycotted the session, falling short of the required quorum.

A second attempt by the ruling Democratic Party to pass a constitutional amendment bill collapsed on Friday after the opposition People Power Party again blocked proceedings in the National Assembly.

由 AI 报道

President José Antonio Kast's government has seen 18 seremis fail to take office or resign since March 11, in under 50 days. The situation has drawn internal scrutiny to the background check team led by Ignacio Dülger, Álvaro Bellolio, and Víctor Valdés. Cases stem from requirement failures, personal motives, or political reasons.

Opposition lawmakers announced plans to submit over two thousand amendments to the national reconstruction project pushed by President José Antonio Kast's government. The move drew accusations of legislative sabotage from the executive branch, while some opposition sectors distanced themselves from the strategy.

由 AI 报道

Opposition party presidents met on Monday at the Socialist Party headquarters to discuss a possible Constitutional Tribunal challenge against President José Antonio Kast's megareform.

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝