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Kosovo set for another snap election after failure to elect president

By Thomson Reuters Apr 29, 2026 | 12:07 AM

PRISTINA, April 29 (Reuters) – Kosovo is set for another snap election after parliament failed to elect a new president on Tuesday, pitching Europe’s ​youngest nation back into the thick of ‌a political crisis.

Parliament had until midnight on Tuesday to choose a head of state after President Vjosa Osmani’s term ended in early April, but Prime Minister Albin Kurti failed ‌to ​bring on board opposition parties ⁠to vote for his ⁠candidate.

Two-thirds of the 120-seat parliament must be present for the vote to be valid. Failure to elect a new president triggers snap parliamentary elections.

“Based on ​the (Constitutional Court) verdict the parliament is considered dissolved,” said the speaker of the parliament and ⁠acting president Albulena Haxhiu at ⁠midnight.

Haxhiu is expected to announce the election ​date soon. It would be the third vote in ​just over a year.

The move extends a political ‌deadlock in Kosovo, which has aspirations to join the European Union. The Balkan country had no functioning government for most of last year as the ⁠fractured parliament failed to elect a speaker for months, threatening much-needed international funding.

A resounding election win by Kurti’s Vetevendosje ⁠party in ‌December had looked likely to end more ⁠than a year of political stalemate.

Choosing ​a ‌president, even one who has no significant ​political powers, ⁠has always proven to be challenging, as two-thirds of lawmakers must attend the voting session, a requirement that makes it easy for the process to be derailed.

(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci and Edward McAllister; Editing ​by Stephen Coates)