Kosovo’s Kurti wins snap election but lacks majority needed to end crisis

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PRISTINA, June 7 (Reuters) – Prime Minister Albin Kurti’s party ‌won Kosovo’s parliamentary election on Sunday, the Balkan country’s third in just 18 months, but fell short of the majority needed to end the country’s prolonged political crisis.
Europe’s youngest and one of its poorest nations aspires to join the European Union, but has lacked ​a fully functioning government for much of the past year. Deep divisions in parliament have blocked the ​election of a speaker and a new head of state.
Kurti’s Vetevendosje party was leading ⁠with 43% of the vote, with 99.4% of the ballots counted, official results showed.
The party would still need coalition ​partners to form a new government, and would need to compromise with rivals to secure the two-thirds majority required ​to elect a new president.
The Democratic Party of Kosovo was polling at 21%, while the Democratic League of Kosovo stood at 18%.
Vetevendosje won 51% in the last election in December, up from 42% in February 2025, but failed to agree with other parties on a ​candidate for the largely ceremonial presidency. That deadlock led to parliament’s dissolution in April and another snap election.

VOTERS ​WANT END TO POLITICAL CRISIS, HIGHER LIVING STANDARDS

Item 1 of 4 Kosovo’s acting Prime Minister and Levizja Vetevendosje (Movement for Self-Determination) party leader Albin Kurti applauds on the day of a snap parliamentary election in Pristina, Kosovo, June 7, 2026. REUTERS/Ognen Teofilovski
Turnout was less than 37%, down from 45% in December, the election commission said. Voters ‌interviewed ⁠at polling centres said they have grown weary of repeated elections and want an end to the political stalemate, as well as higher living standards in line with economic growth.
“The political elite needs to be ready to reach an agreement. There has been a very deep division caused over recent years, and this must come to an end,” ​said Fatos Selimi, an ​IT worker, after voting in ⁠the capital Pristina.
The EU has urged politicians in Kosovo, which declared independence from Serbia in 2008, to create strong institutions capable of delivering reforms needed for membership.
The successive ​elections have delayed those reforms and the flow of EU funds.
Kurti’s party first came ​to power in ⁠2021 with a more nationalist, welfare-focused agenda. Like all major parties in Kosovo, it is pro-Western. It 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 were competing for seats in the 120-seat parliament.
About 2.1 million voters ​are registered, exceeding Kosovo’s 1.6 million resident population, reflecting a large diaspora that is mostly based in western Europe and tends to favour Kurti’s ​party.

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