Hasani explains what happens if VV fails to form the government for the first time
Former head of the Constitutional Court, Enver Hasani, explains that, even if Vetevendosje (VV) cannot build a governing coalition the Constitution doesn’t allow other political entities to come together and build the government.
As a guest of Debate Plus show, in Dukagjini Television,Hasani says that some constitutions, such as that of Northern Macedonia, allow other parties to form the government, but, as he stressed according to the Constitution of Kosovo this is not allowed.
Moreover, even if there were signatures to form the majority of other parties outside Vetevendosje “it’s just a prejudice that they will vote for the next government and prime minister,” news portal Telegrafi quotes Hasani’s words.
“Where do we know if those deputies who sign up will vote for the next majority?” he raised a question.
Hasani had also clarified that, the party that came first in the election, as in this case Vetevendosje, has the right to propose a second candidate for the prime minister, if the former fails to win a simple majority of 61 votes in the Assembly.
Otherwise, the former head of the Constitutional Court, who ousted Isa Mustafa from the post of the speaker of parliament during the VLAN coalition, underlined that from 2014 it’s very clear who builds the government. Since then, as he explained, no one has tried to act differently.