That was Albin Kurti's big secret to becoming prime minister

That was Albin Kurti's big secret to becoming prime minister

Early elections produced an early outcome. A result I had anticipated two years ago. He gained the spirit of change. Opposition parties, Albin's VV and Vjosa's LDK won convincingly, while PAN parties suffered debakes. PDK received less than 22 per cent of the vote, AAK less than [...]

Early elections produced an early outcome. A result I had anticipated two years ago. He gained the spirit of change. Opposition parties, Albin's VV and Vjosa's LDK won convincingly, while PAN parties suffered debakes. The PDK received less than 22 per cent of the vote, AAK less than 12 while the AKR Initiative did not pass the threshold.

But, the full victory, however, belongs only to Albin Kurti Vetevendosje candidate for prime minister. Vetevendosje came out most voting than the LDK, and Kurti will most likely come out more voted than Vjosa Osmani.

I want to mention two of the main reasons that forced people to support the leader of Vetevendosje and his greatest secret in the third part.

Corruption

“Cogito, ergo sum” is probably the most important statement of modernity expressed by the great philosopher Rene Descartes in the X century 6 / 15 Translated into Albanian, he little-a-a-lot makes “I think, so I'm” giving cogito, thought, subject, the value of a cornerstone of human existence and opening the horizon for a power that would quickly manufacture the individual mass.

Of course, Carrtean philosophy has been overcome long ago, along with the individual and cogito é left as ancient relics that are now used only by uninformed people. But the last kick of modernity's father, and modernity itself, comes from a place in the deepest recesses of history, Kosovo. Hajgare.

Post-war governments were built on the real estate as follows “Corruptio, ergo sum!” that is translated into Albanian from Latin would make “corruption, so I am.” The cornerstone of the power of these governments became just corruption, or abuse.

Why? Because of their deep, close relationship with this fly, it did not turn out to be seeking meritocracy, but the opposite, ease in employment and privileges. A meritocratic power could have left everyone unemployed because, lacking professional quads, no competence, and the workforce was completely unqualified.

Well, the powers just turned to social pressure that required work, wanted schooling, wanted favors, and was nowhere to be competent. For corruption to thrive on simply a closing of the eyes, fear of its confrontation sufficed. The production scheme has its foundations fixed in the 2000s, and no prime minister would vice.

Kosovo had the prime ministers of track and train, but they all submitted to SBASK's co-chairman Ysharight.

Image crisis

The ups and downs were rooted in the country's poor peasantism. They were probably the most discriminated against in the Yugoslav regime. Yet, they betrayed the socioeconomic position they once belonged to.

But that's not that simple. All that human structure that received favors and post-war jobs was disgusted by their image.

Our image crisis began in 2014. And all of this, from a complete disagreement of election results (which brought it up PDK winner, with images produced. Thus, the situation deteriorated dramatically and an aggressive invasion campaign began. No means were spared. To illustrate this, we need to mention the scandalous reporting that made a very professional television for our standards, KTV, interviewing some PDK sympathies drunk and uneasable. The video in question was highly clicked on social networking by means of ridicule and grave reproach on people who were also passing on to racism for the province, and the rural type they belonged to. The purpose of the video was to portray the party's voters and make fun of them. This is the start of the crisis. This is not an image. Its result was the construction of a complete refusal to PDK from all other parliamentary parties and all civil society. Any possible cooperation with them made each one defiled. And so, it was isolated and lynched thirty percent of the Kosovo electorate. The PDK makes the political-economic system installed by the international community and social structure look bad.

I'm not even mentioning the two young men of “. PDK. Also, not even the man who said “ma voted the vote” who reported yesterday that he was leaving the country in the face of public ridicule.

Kosovo society voted Vetevendosje because it is in urbanisation above and pervertedly stigmatizes villagers. The best - known Humorists in the country, with millions of views, Stupcats, most of the time as corrupt characters, thieves, have villagers, and as honest characters, citizens have them.

This message was understood the weather by the PDK, but especially in the last elections, when the commanders were replaced that ran from this poor peasant, with urban icons such as Eliza Hoxha's Migen Kelmendi [r.3 on the list], or women with names like Besa Ismaili and Valdet Idrizi.

And now, we are in danger that the PDK, after its opposition adoption, will become more acceptable and more peaceful because of these urban people on the list, and not because of an eventual shift.

So Albin won, and he grew up in the city. Because there was no emphasis from any backlog in Kosovo, and because activists alike had that problem.

Post-ideological politician

Albin Kurti does not lead a left party, or centre left, as he likes to say. He leads a post-ideological party, which makes an elaborate mix of romantic nationalism with social policies, with which social policy is more relevant today in Eastern Europe, and with extreme right. In his party, we have people from Orthodox Marxism to the right extreme, ballists.

How close Kurt was to the attitudes his party promoted in the past, we could best see him during this campaign. He was upset when he was asked about his party's nationalist rhetoric ideas, the principle of self-rule, the party statute that he had forgotten [that he had to resign from the position of chairman in case he was elected prime minister], for replacing Euro currency with Lek, etc.

He was also not voted into a program. It was soon learned that, in fact, his programme on this campaign was made constantly, step-to-go, when for a month he changed the budget for the army for no less than 200m euros. Of the 600 million for four years he promised on August 22nd, he reduced it to only the 400 million he promised on September 23rd. And as prime minister, I hope it will reduce even more.

Kurt reinforced the idea, perhaps unwittingly, that he was not a prisoner of ideas. And citizens didn't vote for any concrete idea of a program or anything, but specifically about Albin that would change when he won the election. So they didn't vote on the current Albin, but they voted on Albin, who would be able to cross the current one.

They voted for a man, not for his ideas. They voted for his appearance, as uncorrupted politician, and not for his stances.

Let's hope the next prime minister of the country has a good job!

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