Kosovo analyst desperate with EU elections: off word European integration

Yesterday, the European Parliament elections ended and results were announced where the largest parliamentary group emerged from the People's Party, which inside has Chancellor Angela Merkel. The extreme right parties did not mark expected growth, even as Matteo Salvin's party and Marine Le Pen won in Italy and France, respectively. [...]
Yesterday, the European Parliament elections ended and results were announced where the largest parliamentary group emerged from the People's Party, which inside has Chancellor Angela Merkel.
The extreme right parties did not mark expected growth, even as Matteo Salvin's party and Marine Le Pen won in Italy and France, respectively.
But it seems that result did not satisfy Kosovo analyst Agon Maliqi, who claims that “has no room for any joy... even has a lot of room for scepticism.” He explains that the EU problem is more structural and includes not only the European Parliament and the European Commission, but also the European Council consisting of national governments of the countries, Periscopi reports.
Maliqi seems so skeptical that it requires Kosovo to lower the hopes of EU integration and remove the word <x0).
This is his full response to Facebook:
There is no room for any joy from European elections, and there is even more room for scepticism. Yes, there are better results for pro-European forces in many countries. But the EU problem has not been and is not at the level of the European Parliament and the European Commission (government), which are built on the basis of today's elections. The problem of deployment in the EU is structural because very great power continues to have the European Council (compared to national governments). For many crucial issues, including enlargement, the EU requires unanimousness on this level. Today's elections showed that many states remain problematic, especially France. The latter seems determined and has the power to block the expansion, which you see as a German project. The Balkans should not expect any corresponding steps from the EU over at least 7-10 years to come. We have to put our hopes to the ground, remove the word European integration from the everyday language, and make reforms for the sake of being useful to us, that otherwise politically Europe sʹka and without sight. ”











