Opposition saw plans to oust Haradinaj government

The Haradinaj government has a safe walk. Kosovo's opposition has no plan for in the short term to initiate any no-confidence motion against it, Koha Ditore writes today. Democratic League (LDK), the main subject in opposition, wants, before the country goes to early elections, national consensus on a list of issues is reached, but [...]
The Haradinaj government has a safe walk. Kosovo's opposition has no plan for in the short term to initiate any no-confidence motion against it, Koha Ditore writes today.
The Democratic League (LDK), the main subject in the opposition, wants, before the country goes to early elections, to reach a national consensus on a list of issues, but which would take years.
The Vetevendosje (LVV) movement, subject that this year has experienced internal trauma, has not spoken at all of the possibility of supporting any no-confidence motion against the executive.
Meanwhile, in the Group of Independent Deputies (GDP), which includes 12 lawmakers who left the LVV, priority is not government collapse, but establishment of what they consider “issues related to improving the lives of citizens”.
The collapse of the Government would have to follow shortly after the finalisation of the vote at the session for ratification of the demarcation agreement with Montenegro, was an assessment of political development observers who had been talking about the paper last week.
That they reasoned, recalling developments that have produced the ruling coalition, including various positions that have so far promoted coalition partners on this issue.











