Baraliu: President must be elected before cabinet formation, otherwise the country risks new elections

Constitutional Law Professor Mazbul Baraliu has estimated that the election of Kosovo's president or president should be a priority after the constitutional institution of the Assembly, warning that failure to elect the head of state within the 60-day constitutional deadline would lead the country to new elections, the Online Economy reports.
In a proposal for Online Economy, Baraliu has said that the Constitution of Kosovo clearly stipulates that the mandate for forming the Government gives the elected president or president, rather than the task leader.
“The constitution clearly states the president of the country or the president, has the right to mandate it, so it does not say duty captive or task leader. So it's clear that the Constitution requires that in this case, immediately after the certificate of results, the verification of mandates, the oath-taking of deputies, the constitution, the election of the new Speaker or speaker of the Assembly, and the president would have to be prioritized, to have the president or president elected later, the government, in order to make use of the case, after the constitution is binding, we have opportunity, because the Constitution also says, in a denotative way that, in terms of my deminative and 60 days after the election of the president's election of the president, he said, he must be the governor's choice of the EUC.
According to Baraliu, after the constitution and the election of his president, the institutions have a constitutional obligation that, within the deadline set to elect the country's president.
So, therefore, it is subsequently up to us under the Constitution to establish the Assembly, elect the Speaker of the Parliament and chairman of the Parliament with full mandate, then within 60 days all institutions, the Parliament, with a session that should be 80 deputies present to vote for, against or abstention, should be elected president or president of the country”, he said.
He has warned that failure to elect the president within the constitutional deadline would produce a new institutional crisis and early elections.
“If this does not happen within 60 days, unfortunately the country must again go to extraordinary and premature new elections”, Baraliu told Online Economy./ Periscope.











