A researcher at the Kosovo Democratic Institute (KDI), Eugen Cakolli, provided details regarding the constitutional deadlines for electing the country’s president, KosovaPress reports.
He stated that the inability to elect the head of state by March 5 automatically sends the country toward early elections.
“Missing the constitutional deadline for electing the President – which is March 5, not March 4 – puts the country in a situation of failing to fulfill a constitutional obligation. Such a situation can practically only be addressed through new early elections. Because if the deadlines depend on the willingness to initiate procedures, then they lose all meaning. By analogy, it would be the same as if the deadline for constituting the Assembly did not start without convening the constitutive session. Above all, constitutional norms cannot be read in isolation or purely literally, because no constitution can foresee every political situation. Even less so, any eventual failure of this process will not be due to constitutional ambiguity, but to political will—or rather, the lack of it to find a solution,” he wrote on social media Facebook.