Reporting with the US and the downloads, things that Kurti Government will remember

Today it is 100 days since Kurti government was formed, while half of them were spent as prime minister. Kurti's government was voted in the Kosovo Assembly on February 3rd of this year, as only after 53 days, on March 25th, it collapsed through a no-confidence motion filed by the LDK, [...]
Kurti government was voted in the Kosovo Assembly on February 3rd this year, as only after 53 days, on March 25th, it collapsed through the no-confidence motion filed by the LDK, which was voted by 82 votes for the Kosovo Assembly.
That happened after Kurti unannounced Interior Minister Agim Veliu. While the main reason according to the LDK was the collapse of reports with the main ally, the US.
Kurte did not listen to American President Donald Trump's special emissary request, Richard Green, for the removal of the tax without reciprocity, which led many diplomats from the US, even to consider removing American troops from Kosovo.
What else the Kurti Government will be known for is the dismissal of public enterprise boards.
Kurti dismissed most of these companies' boards, meanwhile appointed four members of his party, Vetevendosje, which Kurti had promised would depoliticise.
The board of directors of the regional water-flower “Pristina”, the Kosovo Telecom Board, the Kosovo Post Board, the KEK Board, the Iber Lepenci Board and the Infraco Board were dismissed by the prime minister, currently in office, Kurti.
As for dialogue, Kurti in the Assembly repeatedly stressed that a bad agreement exists on Kosovo for its partition. In a television show, he said Kosovo President Hashim Thaci, along with his counterpart Aleksandar Vuciq, had been heard with a knife map.
On the other hand, Kurti offered no solution for dialogue, Kosovo remained blocked, just as it had been in the past with issues like “demarcation with Montenegro”, “The Association of Serb majority municipalities” and other topics.
Recently, Kurti, in addition to disappointments with the actions of President Thaci, who has addressed them in the Constitutional Court, has sent complaining letters to internationals, such as the Venice Commission and two days ago to the European Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee against Thaci's decree to form government with mandated Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti.












