Jump to content
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia

Elections in Kosovo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (April 2023)
Constitution and law
Recent elections

Parliamentary elections to the Assembly of Kosovo (Albanian: Kuvendi i Kosovës, Serbian Cyrillic: Скупштина Косова, transliterated Skupstina Kosova) have been held four times since 1999 with the latest in December 2010.[1] The Assembly was an institution within the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government (PISG) established by the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) to provide 'provisional, democratic self-government' in advance of a decision on the final status of Kosovo. Kosovo, formerly a province of Serbia, came under UN administration in 1999 and unilaterally declared its independence in February 2008. The Assembly elected in 2007 continued in office after the declaration of independence.

Since the Kosovo War, the country has held four parliamentary elections, one every three years, in 2001, 2004, 2007, and 2010 respectively. The first two were administered by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and the second two monitored by the international community, with the OSCE and other observing groups concluding that these elections were generally fair and free.

Under Kosovo's Constitutional Framework, which established the PISG, elections were to be held every three years for the Assembly. The Assembly then in turn elects a president and prime minister. The Assembly had 120 members elected for a three-year term: 100 members elected by proportional representation, and 20 members representing national minorities (10 Serbian, 4 Roma, Ashkali and Egyptian, 3 Bosniak, 2 Turkish and 1 Gorani). Under the new Constitution of 2008, the guaranteed seats for Serbs and other minorities remains the same, but in addition they may gain extra seats according to their share of the vote. Kosovo has a multi-party system, with numerous parties and the system of proportional representation and guaranteed minority representation means that no one party is likely to have a parliamentary majority. In addition, a minimum number of Ministers were and remain reserved for Serbs and other minorities. The voting age in Kosovo is 18 years old.[2] [3]

Parliamentary elections (latest)

[edit ]

2021

[edit ]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Vetëvendosje 438,33550.2858+29
Democratic Party of Kosovo 148,28517.0119–5
Democratic League of Kosovo 110,98512.7315–15
Alliance for the Future of Kosovo 62,1117.128–5
Serb List 44,4075.09100
Social Democratic Initiative 21,9972.520–4
Turkish Democratic Party of Kosovo 6,4960.7520
Vakat Coalition 5,3660.621–1
New Democratic Initiative of Kosovo 3,3050.3810
Romani Initiative 3,1720.361New
New Democratic Party 2,8850.3310
Social Democratic Union 2,5490.291New
Egyptian Liberal Party 2,4300.280–1
United Community2,2170.250New
Unique Gorani Party 2,1610.2510
Ashkali Party for Integration 2,1380.2510
Democratic Ashkali Party of Kosovo 1,9600.2200
Civic Initiative for Freedom, Justice and Survival 1,5080.170New
Our Initiative1,3750.160New
Movement for Integration1,2610.140New
Innovative Turkish Movement Party1,2430.140New
Progressive Movement of Kosovar Roma 1,2080.141New
Fjala1,0870.1200
United Roma Party of Kosovo 1,0740.120–1
Coalition Together (GIG–PG)1,0100.1200
Kosovar New Romani Party 6000.0700
Serbian Democratic Alliance4760.050New
Albanian National Front Party 1550.020New
Total871,796100.001200
Valid votes871,79696.38
Invalid/blank votes32,7563.62
Total votes904,552100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,851,92748.84
Source: CEC, CEC, CEC

Community Assembly of Kosovo

[edit ]

According to UNMIK practice, Serbian national referendums and elections for Parliament and President were allowed in Kosovo, but local elections were organized separately by UNMIK and the PISG. In spite of this, Serbia carried out local elections in Kosovo in 2008; these were not recognized by UNMIK.[citation needed ]

The Community Assembly of Kosovo and Metohija is a local government created by the Serbian minority in the Kosovo city of Mitrovica in response to the 2008 Kosovo declaration of independence.[4] The first elections for the Assembly took place on May 11, 2008[5] to coincide with the 2008 Serbian local elections.

In the Brussels agreement, the government of Serbia agreed to integrate Kosovo Serb political structures into the government of Kosovo.

See also

[edit ]

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ "EU and US introduce Kosovo resolution". Financial Times. Retrieved 23 July 2007.
  2. ^ Kosovo. Youthpolicy.org. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  3. ^ "Legal Voting Age by Country". WorldAtlas. 7 September 2017. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  4. ^ "Serbs form rival Kosovo assembly". BBC News . 2008年06月14日. Retrieved 2008年06月14日.
  5. ^ "Kosovo Serbs launch new assembly". BBC News . 2008年06月28日. Retrieved 2008年06月28日.
[edit ]
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
Kosovo articles
History
Early history
Modern history
Geography
Environment
Landscapes
Regions of Kosovo
Politics
Status
Economy
Society
Culture

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /