Constitutional reviewing Serbian List complaint

The Constitutional Court has confirmed that it is reviewing the Serbian List's complaint concerning the election of Deputy Speaker of the Parliament from the ranks of the Serb minority. The decision is expected to be made after all claims are considered. The Serbian List complaint, claiming that with the election of Nenad Rashiqi, the Constitution, regulation of the Parliament's work, [...]
The decision is expected to be made after all claims are considered. The complaint of the Serbian List, with the claim that with the election of Nenad Rashi, the Constitution has been violated, regulating the work of the Parliament, as well as the Constitutional Act on the same issue, follows the requirement for setting up a temporary measure to stop, as they say, unconstitutional actions that could cause irreversible damage, follows Periscope.
There is no clarification from the Constitution on whether they are considering setting such a measure. Another complaint by the Serbian List, but on the case of the constitutional vice-chairmen, addressed it in early September, at the time that Chief Prosecutor Dimal Basha had announced the constitutionalisation of the Assembly without the election of fifth deputy chairman from the ranks of the Serb community. On September 5th, the Constitutional Court, on the basis of the Serbian List complaint, suspended the Parliament's work for 25 days by making a decision on temporary measures.
Under the full justice, the Assembly was not constitutionalised, so the Court urged MPs to elect the deputy leader from the ranks of the Serb community in order to pave the way for forming the government. The Constitutional decision was highlighted that the proposal for deputy leader from among non-party communities should be made by the majority or the largest number of MPs from the ranks of Serb community deputies, but did not allow vetoing veto.
After the Serbian List exhausted the candidacy, Chief Prime Minister Dimal Basha urged them to make the MP's proposal, which does not belong to the list's parliamentary group. Since the subject backed by official Belgrade refused to do so, Nenad Rashiqi's candidacy, which received the votes necessary for the deputy head of the Parliament, was put to the polls.
The ninth legislature was announced as constitutional on 10 October, with Nenad Rashiqi's election as deputy leader from the ranks of the Serb minority, which was elected after nine Serbian List candidacies were exhausted, with three consecutive votes.
President Vjosa Osmani, a day after the Assembly was counted as a constitutionalised, mandated Vetevendosje leader Albin Kurti to form the new government. He has eight more days to present the composition and program of the new government.
The government's election requires 61 MPs' votes. In the February 9th elections, Vetevendosje won 48 seats in parliament with 120 deputies.
If Kurt fails to secure the 61 votes needed by 26 October, then Osmani, according to the law, is obliged that within 10 days he is invited to consult political parties once again, and to decide, according to its discretion, for the other mandate, if he proves to have numbers to form Government.
The future mandate must also have 15 days to present the composition of the government cabinet.
If the government is not elected the second time, then the president announces the elections, which should be held no later than 40 days from the day of their proclamation. / RTK












