Enver Hasani: Constitution does not say chief parliament must be elected by secret vote

Former head of the Constitutional Court, Enver Hasani, has suggested that the way of voting for the election of the president cannot be changed in the process. In an interview for Euro News Albania, he has suggested that the Constitution of Kosovo does not predict that the Speaker of the Parliament can be elected by a secret vote. Hasani, [...]
In an interview for Euro News Albania, he has suggested that the Constitution of Kosovo does not predict that the Speaker of the Parliament can be elected by a secret vote.
Hasan, who has written the Constitutional Act of 2014, has shown that even this document does not say that the chief officer should be found with a secret vote.
When it comes to voting in the assembly, the Constitutional Court has shown what ways of voting are under regulation then and today. So, they didn't say that this is how with the secret vote I should have elected the mayor, because he couldn't say it, because that's the case with the Constitution, by the law and by the regulation of the Parliament. This does not mean the Kosovo Constitutions, the president says. It may say as some European constitutions say are due to a secret vote, but it has not said”, Hasani has indicated, adding that the secret vote has been only intended at the meeting of former Parliament Speaker Glauk Konjufca, with representatives of parties winning seats in the assembly.
It could eventually decide on April 8th when it is the agenda for the constitutional gathering. Then, political forces have been trying to say the vote will be secret, but now it cannot be changed. This is completely chaotic, completely unconstitutional and entirely against parliamentary rule of law”, Hasani has said./Periscopi/












