CEC reformation prepared

21/05/2014 00:00

The Central Election Commission might return very soon into a hot topic between the government and the opposition.

After the three members of the Socialist Party and Socialist Movement for Integration left the Central Election Commission, this institution has remained with four members, one year before the next local elections. This institution is now unable to take important decisions.

This has been confirmed by Lefterije Lleshi at the Commission of Laws.

“We need the quorum to review the sublegal acts. We cannot continue, since most of the normative acts require votes”, Lleshi declared.

The Chairwoman of the Central Election Commission, Lefteri Lleshi, appeared at the Commission of Laws for the annual routine report, but the rapporteur of the Socialist Party, Blendi Klosi, gave as solution for this stalemate the reformation of the Central Election Commission. However, now it is clear that the opposition is against any unilateral change of the consensual formula.

“I don’t think that the Democratic Party colleagues who proposed the CEC member will go to the next elections without a reformation of this institution”, Klosi declared.

“Any assumption for reformation would be a turning back at the years 2000 and 2001, since now we have a consensual law that cannot be changed just because they have a majority of votes”, declared the Democratic Party Parliament Member, Oerd Bylykbashi.

Any modification at the Electoral Code and that affects the Central Election Commission has been made with the consensus of the two bigger parties. But more time is needed for this to happen again, or at least a stance is needed by the Socialist Party.

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