Kosovo’s ruling Vetevendosje party came first in Sunday’s parliamentary election, but fell short of an outright majority needed to rule without coalition partners, preliminary results showed on Monday.
Despite a drop in support from a 2021 vote, the result sets up prime minister Albin Kurti to lead the next government in the small Balkan country where politics are dominated by the relationship with neighbouring Serbia and Serbs within its borders.
A government led by Mr Kurti, a left-wing Albanian nationalist, is likely to continue policies to extend government control over the north, where about 50,000 ethnic Serbs live, many of whom refuse to recognise Kosovo’s independence from Serbia in 2008.
That worries moderates who fear a return to the ethnic violence that has blighted the region in recent years.
Vetevendosje won 41.3 per cent of votes with 88 per cent of ballots counted, down from more than 50 per cent in the 2021 poll that brought a Vetevendosje-led coalition to power, results from the election commission showed.
The opposition Democratic Party of Kosovo was second with 21.8 per cent and the Democratic League of Kosovo party had 17.8 per cent.
“Preliminary results show one true, exact and clear thing, and this is that the Vetevendosje movement has won the elections of February 9th, 2025,” Mr Kurti told supporters in the capital Pristina.
But in the same speech Mr Kurti insulted potential coalition partners by saying the opposition were “animals” and “thieves” ready to make a deal “with the devil” against his government.
During an acrimonious election campaign, in which fines for misconduct trebled over the 2021 poll, Mr Kurti said he would refuse to rule with a coalition.
Kosovo, which is majority ethnic Albanian, is Europe’s newest country, and one of its poorest. It gained independence from Serbia in 2008 after a 78-day Nato bombing campaign against Serbian forces in 1999.
The election campaign saw debates over corruption, crime, health and education, but looming in the background is the situation in the north, where Mr Kurti’s moves to reduce ethnic Serbs' autonomy has stoked tensions and isolated it from the European Union and the United States.
The EU placed economic curbs on the country in 2023 for its role in the tensions, cutting at least €150 million in funding, Reuters found. – Reuters