Kosovo is heading towards its third parliamentary election in a year, due to Albin Kurti's decision to force the opposition to vote for his presidential candidate. The first election failed after Albin Kurti failed to get 50+ votes and held the country for eight months through parliamentary procedures in an attempt to elect the speaker of the Assembly and then the government.
After the failure, he entered the second parliamentary elections with the same government from the previous year, and thanks to the collapse of LDK and AAK, he managed to get 51 percent, being free to form the government himself.
But he didn't stop there. He also needs the country's president. Vjosa Osmani seems to have become a problem for him because of her protagonism with the international factor, mainly the European Union and the USA, and he wants a president of his own, so that he doesn't overshadow him. He is asking this of the opposition parties, as if they owe him something, instead of making a deal by offering the president and consolidating a long-term majority in Kosovo in these difficult times.
Today, talks with LDK and PDK have failed, and it seems that the only solution is new elections. Albin Kurti has no chance of getting enough votes to run for president, even though he could emerge as the leading party again, and thus Kosovo, due to his ambition, will enter an endless spiral of non-governance, a kind of "permanent revolution", as Lenin called his theory of seizing all power.
Facing him is an opposition fragmented and complexed by being a minority, unable to create a spirit of trust to change the result. LDK, which has turned from a political party into a bureaucratic administration, now hopes that with Vjosa Osmani it can lift the pants that its leadership has brought to its knees. PDK, with its head in The Hague and its eyes on power, has no chance of going higher than it is, while Haradinaj is useless in conditions when the two main parties are in decline.
Under these conditions, the crisis in Kosovo will repeat itself like a black and white photocopy, where everyone knows what will happen. Kosovo will not be governed until Albin Kurti takes all the powers, or until the opposition disperses and goes home. /GazetaTema/