Lawyer PDK: Constitutional decision more than legal victory, protection and parliamentary and constitutional order

Kosovo's Constitutional Court has decided that Kosovo Assembly deputies must elect the new Speaker of the Parliament through open voting, and within 30 days. The Constitution has determined that the same candidate can only be voted up to three times. The Constitutional Court has also ordered MPs to be present [...]
The Constitution has determined that the same candidate can only be voted up to three times. The Constitutional Court has also ordered MPs to attend the constitutional hearing and participate in the vote, says online Reporter.net.
Lawyer The PDK, Faton Fetah, has said that this decision represents a decisive twist in resolving one of the deepest constitutional and parliamentary crises in our Republic's history.
Fetah has written that today's decision is a return to constitutionality, a defence and parliamentary order, and a testimony that belief in the Constitution and constitutional justice is the foundation of state stability.
This decision is more than a legal victory. It is a return to constitutionality, a defence of parliamentary order, and a testimony that belief in the Constitution and constitutional justice is the foundation of state stability.
I humbly see this case as one of the most important professional contributions I have given to the country's institutional life, helping unblock the Assembly and restore democratic legitimacy in its functioning. Kosovo has the Constitution. It's okay. It's a turn. And there is a way out when we remain loyal to the spirit and values of constitutional order”, Fetah wrote.
Full response:
The constitutional solution I long warned of came true today!
Today, the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Kosovo approved the KO193/25 request, submitted by PDK Parliamentary Group deputies, which I had the honour to draft and hand over to the quality of their authorised representative. This decision represents a crucial turn in resolving one of the deepest constitutional and parliamentary crises in our Republic's history.
The Constitutional Court decided:
Let me declare it invalid “Secret Vote Commission”, proposed by the parliamentary majority at the June 29th 2025 session, with the reasoning that it violates the agenda of the Constituent session which is closed, solemn and unstable;
Let him claim that the unilateral interruption of the session by Chief Avni Dehari constitutes violations of the Constitution and the coongrection of KO124/25, and that his actions are incompatible with Article 116 of the Constitution;
Let all hearings of the Assembly held from June 27th to July 26th 2025 be declared invalid due to the failure to implement the previous act and serious procedural and constitutional violations;
To order the chairman to proceed with the 3rd point of the constitutional session agenda, approved on April 8, 2025, giving the largest parliamentary group the right to propose the candidate for Speaker of the Right Assembly only three times for the same candidate;
To order all elected deputies to attend and vote, thereby guaranteeing the integrity and fulfillment of their constitutional obligations;
To set a 30-day deadline for choosing the Speaker and Vice President of the Parliament from the day of its entry into force.
I've been deeply convinced in this epilogue since the beginning. Since February 2025, in a written analysis, I have warned of the institutional danger being shaped and offered a constitutional solution based on the Court's jurisdiction (August 31/0314), the Assembly Order and the Spirit of the Constitution.
Today, that solution was confirmed and affirmed by the Court itself as the only legitimate and constitutional way.
This decision is more than a legal victory. It is a return to constitutionality, a defence of parliamentary order, and a testimony that belief in the Constitution and constitutional justice is the foundation of state stability.
I humbly see this case as one of the most important professional contributions I have given to the country's institutional life, helping unblock the Assembly and restore democratic legitimacy in its functioning.
Kosovo has the Constitution. It's okay. It's a turn. And there is a way out when we are loyal to the spirit and values of the constitutional order.












