Tahiri: Politicians' promises as Santa wishes, electoral reform necessary

Politologist Ramush Tahiri is seeing electoral reform necessary so that the Parliament strengthens control over Government. Tahiri in an interview for Online Economics has said the Assembly is always turning into the government's protracted “handover”. “Parliament to us is the extended hand of the government never happened that parliament with [...]
Tahiri in an interview for Online Economics has said the Assembly is always turning into the government's protracted “handover”.
The parliament has never failed a bill or changed, and we always have positions and opposition, but we never have something that is the interest of the people. I am that then electoral and legal reform and strengthen the control of the assembly towards the government, and that made us democratic state”.
He has also commented on political subjects' programs in an interview for Online Economy, even identifying them as Santa's wish.
Tahiri says political parties have given nearly the same promises.
And they become like Santa's wishes and promises of money and pay increases, with billions of dollars distribution investments, and it would be just as good if all this money came from outside, and it's very bad that this money is our tax, and they're just distributing it and they're telling us that our money knows how to divide better than we know where we're going, the”
The “are reckless promises that should not be trusted, and there is no analysis by economists who show that the distribution of the budget in this way is to be treated with no initiative to the Kosovo budget”.
He is even convinced that with the formation of government expected after February 14th, neither party will respect the programme.
All the political parties I think someone reads the programs that I believe even when the government has become neither respected by including the VV that it seems to be a incoming Government”.
According to him, any election outcome that will have to be accepted by political parties, as he says rejection of results risks political parties entering the cycle of anarchy.
“Recent surveys of the PIPO appear real, of importance is that fair voting was accepted and that Kosovo must avoid the risk of not accepting elections, and a party that is not satisfied with results and not accepted and entered the cycle of anarchy. It is seen that no party will make the government its own and we will have coalitions and we will have harmonisation of the programme for governance”.
National elections in the country are expected to be held Sunday on February 14th.












