Kryeziu: VV to sit at the table with other subjects, negotiate

KDI Executive Director Ismet Kryeziu has called on Vetevendosje to sit on the table with other political parties and negotiate, writes Periscope. No compromise, no Parliament, no government. Compromise is the principle guaranteeing the functioning of institutions from the election of the Speaker of the Parliament to the president, ratification of international agreements [...]
No compromise, no Parliament, no government. Compromise is the principle that guarantees the functioning of institutions from the election of the Speaker of the Parliament to the president, ratification of international agreements to representation of communities.
Therefore, the VV needs to understand that change of approach is necessary. Any constitutional right given, if not willingly supported for the agreement, remains only a formal and insufficient step to ensure the functionality of the institutions”, the Kryeziu cross-step.
Full Posting:
Although the Constitutional Court has granted VV the right as the first subject to proposing the candidate for the Speaker of the Parliament, this does not rule out the need for consensus and political agreement. At this moment, the political obligation for the VV is clear: to sit at the table with other subjects, negotiate and find a personality that can gain the trust and vote of MPs, paving the way for the constitution's constitutionalisation.
The problem is that the VV has often treated this right as an absolute privilege, ignoring the fact that our proportional system is elevated to compromise and political agreement. No party can rule alone and no one is given unconditional power. Without compromise, there is no Parliament, no government. Compromise is the principle that guarantees the functioning of institutions from the election of the Speaker of the Parliament to the president, ratification of international agreements to representation of communities.
Therefore, the VV needs to understand that change of approach is necessary. Any constitutional right granted, unless willingly backed for agreements, remains only a formal and insufficient step to ensure the functionality of institutions.












