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Kosovo Holds Another Snap Election as Political Crisis Drags On

PRISTINA, June 7 (Reuters) – Kosovo heads ⁠to ⁠the polls for parliamentary ⁠elections on Sunday, the third in just 18 months, ​as no one party has been able to gain a strong enough majority to ‌pull the Balkan country out ‌of a political crisis.

Europe’s youngest nation has aspirations to join the ⁠European Union ⁠but has had no functioning government for much of the ​last year as its fractured parliaments failed to elect first a speaker and then a new head of state.

No opinion polls have been conducted recently but analysts ​predict victory again for Prime Minister Albin Kurti’s Vetevendosje party. However, he ⁠will still ⁠need to reach a ⁠compromise ​with opposition parties to secure the two-thirds majority required to elect a new ​president, they say.

Kurti’s party ⁠won 51.1% of the vote in the last election in December, up from 42% in February 2025, but could not agree with other parties on a candidate for the largely ceremonial presidency, triggering the dissolution of parliament ⁠in April and another snap election.

The EU has urged politicians in Kosovo – ⁠which declared independence from Serbia in 2008 – to create strong institutions that can deliver the reforms needed to join the bloc.

Kurti’s party first came to power in 2021 with a more nationalist, welfare-focused agenda. Like all parties in Kosovo, it has a pro-Western orientation. It also opposes further concessions to Serbia, with which relations remain strained.

Kosovo’s election commission has said more than 900 candidates from 17 parties ⁠and three coalition groups are competing for seats in the 120-seat parliament.

About 2.1 million voters are registered – more than Kosovo’s 1.6 million resident population due to a large diaspora, which is based mostly ​in western Europe and tends to favour Kurti’s party.

(Reporting by ​Fatos Bytyci; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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