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Court bars Kosovo president from announcing snap election date

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on March 10, 2026

2 min read

· Last updated: April 1, 2026

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Court bars Kosovo president from announcing snap election date
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PRISTINA, March 10 (Reuters) - Kosovo's highest court told the president late on Monday not to announce the date for a snap election before March 31, a move that further prolongs a political crisis

Kosovo Court Blocks President from Setting Snap Election Amid Political Crisis

Political Crisis Deepens as Kosovo Court Intervenes

PRISTINA, March 10 (Reuters) - Kosovo's highest court told the president late on Monday not to announce the date for a snap election before March 31, a move that further prolongs a political crisis that has engulfed the tiny Balkan nation.

Background to the Crisis

Last Friday, President Vjosa Osmani dissolved the parliament and called a snap election - without setting a date - after lawmakers failed to pick a new head of state within the constitutional deadline that expired at midnight on Thursday.

Prolonged Political Deadlock

Her move extended a political deadlock in Kosovo, which is Europe's youngest nation and has aspirations to join the European Union. Kosovo had no functioning government for most of last year as the fractured parliament failed to elect a speaker for months.

Court Ruling and Immediate Impact

In a verdict published late on Monday, the Constitutional Court temporarily barred the president from setting an election date and also froze the parliament's efforts to elect a new head of state. The court decision stays in effect until March 31.

Prime Minister's Response

Prime Minister Albin Kurti had asked the Constitutional Court to rule on whether Osmani had acted in line with the constitution. Kurti is a former ally of Osmani but decided not to back her for a second term in the ceremonial role of president.

Government Statement

Kurti's government welcomed the court verdict but added: "For three weeks we will be in a state of waiting, while a number of agreements and decisions of importance for citizens continue to remain without approval by the parliament."

Challenges Ahead

The parliamentary election, if it goes ahead, would be the third in just over a year.

Difficulty in Electing a President

Choosing a president - though the role brings no significant political powers - has always proven politically challenging because two-thirds of lawmakers must attend the voting session in parliament, making it easy to disrupt.

(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci, editing by Gareth Jones)

Key Takeaways

  • The Constitutional Court issued an injunction on March 9, freezing Osmani’s decree dissolving parliament and barring her from announcing an election date until March 31 (en.wikipedia.org).
  • Parliament failed to elect a new president by the March 5 deadline due to a lack of quorum, triggering Osmani’s dissolution decree and prompting the court challenge by Prime Minister Kurti’s party (yahoo.com).
  • Kosovo’s ongoing political crisis, with frequent failures to elect heads of state or form governments, continues to undermine institutional functionality and threatens delays in EU accession and budget approvals (apnews.com).

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did the Constitutional Court bar President Osmani from setting a snap election date?
The Court issued a temporary injunction on March 10, 2026, ruling that President Vjosa Osmani cannot announce a snap election date before March 31 and also froze parliament’s efforts to elect a new head of state, pending a full constitutional review ([yahoo.com](https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/court-bars-kosovo-president-announcing-105423792.html?utm_source=openai)).
What triggered the political crisis leading to this decision?
The crisis began when President Osmani dissolved parliament on March 6 after lawmakers failed to elect a new president by the constitutional deadline (midnight on the preceding Thursday); she called for snap elections but did not set a date ([yahoo.com](https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/court-bars-kosovo-president-announcing-105423792.html?utm_source=openai)).
How did Prime Minister Albin Kurti respond to the president’s decree?
Prime Minister Kurti, who had previously been an ally of Osmani but refused to back her for a second term, asked the Constitutional Court to determine whether her actions were constitutional, and his government welcomed the court’s ruling while warning that parliamentary decisions on key issues would remain on hold for three weeks ([yahoo.com](https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/court-bars-kosovo-president-announcing-105423792.html?utm_source=openai)).
What are the broader implications for Kosovo’s political stability?
If the election goes ahead, it would be Kosovo’s third parliamentary vote in just over a year, reflecting a deepening political deadlock; difficulties arise because electing a president requires a two‑thirds parliamentary quorum, a threshold that has repeatedly proved hard to meet ([yahoo.com](https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/court-bars-kosovo-president-announcing-105423792.html?utm_source=openai)).

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