VV faces proposals for changing the agenda, opposition: No Emergency

The Kosovo Parliament during the plenary Senate that is being held today (Fest) has faced no reconciliation among parliamentary groups over the prosecution of bills proposed by the Vetevendosje Movement, Periscope reports. The opposition has considered VVA's request urgent and inadequate for voting. Vetevendosje Movement has proposed since the session [...]
The opposition has considered VVA's request urgent and inadequate for voting.
The Vetevendosje movement has proposed that eight bills be introduced at the hearing, including the one for ceiling prices, for Mediterranean games, for social residence, for health insurance, and others. But neither of these proposals have received the opposition's votes.
While the chairman of the PDK Parliamentary Group, Arian Tahiri, has declared that his party will not support the LVV-proposed bills.
According to Tahiri, these laws are not urgent and should not be handled outside regular procedures, naming them an attempt to build the election campaign agenda.
“The PDK considers that these bill proposals are not urgent, and as such, no one is allowed to be treated outside regular procedures. It is a tendency of the government to build the election campaign...”, Tahiri said.
While LDK Parliamentary Group chief Jehona Lushaku Sadriou said her party would not support the LVV-proposed bills.
Lushaku said the bills needed time to analyse, and according to her, these bills came to MPs in less than a week.
We are now trying to adopt the proposed agenda in the leadership, which unfortunately due to the lack of consensus from the largest parliamentary group failed to be approved, we have a draft there, and today it is demanding that this be met with an additional number of bills, bills that have been passed this week on commissions and are coming to be adopted in an accelerated manner at the Assembly of Parliament. In fact, all the draft topics they deal with are important for citizens, but not for the period for which to be examined. The bills are required to be analysed and these have come less than a week to MPs. This urgency is unreasonable and will not be backed by us, as long as we don't have enough time to parse these”, ”, Lushaku said among other things.
On the other hand, AAKA Parliamentary Group chief Besnik Tahiri has also said he does not support changing the agenda.
There is no logic to break the agenda every session. Not that we don't support him, but that's what I'm asking is not to turn into parliamentary practice”. /Periscope/











