Monday, November 15, 2021

Kurti "deservedly punished": 4/38

SManalysis


Self-Determination Movement aimed to win this local, as well as parliamentary elections, without a clear program, but with demagogic rhetoric instead.

SOURCE: KOSOVO ONLINE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2021 | 08:35

This was said by analyst Leon Duhanaj, who stated that the voters recognized their empty promises and therefore deservedly punished them.

"The Self-Determination Movement lost the elections from February 14 to November 14, as a result of the unrealistic offer it made to the citizens over the years. The citizens understood the fraud that was done to them, promising them paradise, but without a program that would offer them a minimum of dignified life. The elections have shown that every candidate for victory must be prepared and have a program. To a large extent, with a few exceptions, the programs, not empty rhetoric and demagoguery won in the end", Duhanaj told Kosovo online.

The ruling Self-Determination Movement, headed by the current Prime Minister of the so-called Kosovo Albin Kurti, won only four of Kosovo's 38 municipalities, which is considered a major failure given how much voter support they enjoyed earlier this year. According to Duhanaj, opposition political parties are the winners of local elections in Kosovo. At the same time, he points out that the citizens of Kosovo have shown maturity, as well as that they are not subject to manipulation.

"Yesterday's elections and the results in the municipalities proved that the citizens of Kosovo are politically mature, they are not easy to manipulate. In my opinion, the result, with a few exceptions, is satisfactory and expected. It has also been proven that the opposition wins this election, while the ruling party suffers a deep loss only a few months after it won more than 50 percent in the parliamentary elections. And this testifies to the condemnation of deceptive demagoguery," Duhanaj said.

He pointed out that Kosovo is a successful example of democratic maturity in relation to countries in the region and beyond, which, in his opinion, is more than promising for the future, except for Serb communities in Kosovo, where, in his opinion, democratic values ​​are "stifled".

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