All the same.

In Kosovo, from its freedom, but even from its declaration of independence, no government has been able to reach any mandate to the end. All this confession has its beginnings since 2001, that is, when the first elections were held for then- self-government provisional institutions that were completed [...]
In Kosovo, from its freedom, but even from its declaration of independence, no government has been able to reach any mandate to the end. All this confession has its beginnings since 2001, so when the first elections were held for then- self-government provisional institutions, but which were completed prematurely, to go to new elections and also brought some prime ministers with short mandates. The most stable government was behind the 2007 elections, but not to the extent that we have regular results of government mandates (Tec government 1 and Thaci government 2).
Now only has the election campaign officially begun, where political subjects have been enlivened for a few days before outgoing Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj resigned. Debates and clashes between political subjects have begun, they are expected to grow even further on these few days, where there will be some polarisation among some political subjects, but by always preserving potential partners with which post-election coalitions are supposed to be formed for forming the new government.
The failure to complete the government mandate in all governments so far is undoubtedly the establishment of non-principled coalitions, so in most cases we've had coalitions of government, so no real programming and ideological coalitions. So, we've had the case of seeing ideological-medic meats within a government. This situation created by those coalitions creates no stability and, as such, in the first obstacle encountered there have been differences over its overcoming or differences even diametrically different about it. We have also had the opportunity to look into the Mustafa government, where there were differences about demarcation, but in the Haradinaj government, where there were differences about tax and dialogue, or even about wage raising, respectively, the ministerial cabinets and the prime minister himself.
The continued resistance of political subjects in Kosovo if they did not complete government mandates made extraordinary elections common. So we've now started an election process which is quite common. Likewise, these common elections will bring nothing unusual or extraordinary, because political subjects are the same ones we have so far had with some minor exceptions to prime ministerial nominations and on the candidate list, but in essence we have few concrete competition programmes. This made the situation commonplace, since even in the past, there were not much container in political party programmes.
What we can already see in the big picture is that the future government can't again be a government that won't keep fleshly programming because party formations especially within the pre-election coalitions are not built on an ideological basis, so which will be a big subject that can come first in the 6 October elections, will be designed to select for partner another major subject, one that stands out of ideology, but will also be assigned to select a coalition party established before the coalition, and add to the parties that are victorious. So, once again the electoral syntagma will be within the title of the Minator Bend song”










