Oppositions begin meetings for the possibility of forming new government without LVV, Undefined Initiative

Candidates for prime minister from PDK, LDK and AAK have met each other. With final results on the table, they seem to be considering the possibility of forming the new government. All these parties have ruled out the possibility of co-operation with the LVV, which beyond small partners inside, sees no other option than the Initiative [...]
Opposition parties are awaiting the Certificate of the results of the February 9th parliamentary elections, confirming in any case that they will not make a government coalition with Prime Minister Albin Kurti's Vetevendosje Movement. The exception here makes Fatmir Limaj's initiative, whose position remains more unclear.
Media reported that Democratic Party of Kosovo candidate for prime minister Bedri Hamza and Democratic League of Kosovo candidate for prime minister Lumir Abdixhiku met on Sunday a day after announcing final results by the Central Election Commission, writes Express, broadcasts. Periscope.
LDK Deputy Chairman Lutfi Haziri confirmed this, while he said they have also met with Alliance for the Future of Kosovo Chairman Ramush Haradinaj.
The LDK “has never talked to LVV in these last weeks”, Haziri said on Wednesday evening, in an interview on the “Clicl” show at RTV 21.
“has initiative with other political parties coming from the opposition. That initiative has prompted meetings with Hamza, Memli Krasniqi, Ramush Haradinaj”, he said.
Haziri said the LDK position remains “clearly”.
Kurti has said his party will form the country's new government, warning “talks” ahead of the certificate of final election results. The PDK and the LDK, but also the AAK, have ruled out the possibility of co-operation with LVV.
The LVV has received 42.30% of the vote, according to the final results and will have 48 seats in the Kosovo Parliament, and Kurti will need a partner on the part of the opposition to stay in power further. The PDK has received 20.95% of the vote (24 MPs), while LDK has received 18.27% (20 deputies). The AAK coalition with the Initiative and others has received 7.06% of the vote (8 deputies ) 5 AAK, 3 Initiatives. Together, the opposition have more mandates (52) than the first party.
The PDK has said it will wait its turn, stressing that LVV has the first right to try to form Government.
Hamza has said on March 10th on the “show Rubikon” in Klan Kosova that with other opposition parties “the programme can be harmonised, while noting his party's differences with LVV, with which he said “we do not see co-operation”.
Even because of software, the number is that the opposition formed Government rather than create that Vetevendosje” movement, he said.
That day, the LDK held a five-hour chairmanship meeting, after which President Lumir Abdixhiku indicated at a media conference the positions he said would hold the oldest party in the country. He said the LDK does not make a coalition government with LVV and does not coalition with any other party without the prime minister's position and without a full government mandate.
Haradinaj, chairman of the AAK, who competed in the coalition with the Initiative, Conservative List and the E-30 Intellectual Forum, is also clearly positioned against a coalition with LVV, saying opposition parties should form the country's next government. The most unclear remains the position of his pre-election coalition partner, Fatmir Limaj, who has earlier expressed readiness to join the government coalition with Albin Kurti's LVV.












