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PoliticsKosovo

Kosovo: Kurti wins snap election, signalling end of impasse

Kalika Mehta with AP, dpa, Reuters | Nik Martin with Reuters, EFE
December 29, 2025

Prime Minister Kurti's governing Self-Determination party won nearly 50% of the vote, results showed with most of the votes counted. It is not yet clear whether he will be able to form a cabinet without a coalition.

Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti looks at the screen with the hand out in front of him
Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti was aiming for an outright majorityImage: Armend Nimani/AFP/Getty Images

Acting Prime Minister Albin Kurti won a clear victory in Kosovo's second parliamentary election in 2025 with some 49.3% of the vote, results suggested on early Monday, with most of the votes counted.

Kosovo has been mired in political paralysis for most of the year, after Kurti's leftist party lost the absolute majority it had won in 2021 and failed to secure the support of any other party to form a government.

Months of unsuccessful coalition talks led to President Vjosa Osmani dissolving the parliament in November and calling an early election.

What are the Kosovo election results?

Kurti's left-leaning Self-Determination party fell just short of an absolute majority. But it remains to be seen whether he will need a coalition in order to form a government.

According to the preliminary results, this is how the other parties performed:  

  • The center-right Democratic Party of Kosovo came second with (PDK) 21% of the vote
  • The centrist Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK) got 13.6% 
  • The conservative Alliance for the Future of Kosovo (AAK) had 5.7%

Kurti said once the election results were certified, "we should swiftly constitute the parliament and then form immediately a new government." He also called on the opposition to support his international loan deals, which would need a two-thirds majority to pass.

Why Kosovo's upcoming parliamentary election matters

04:48

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High stakes for Kurti and rivals

Kurti, who has governed since 2021, was hoping for a decisive result similar to his 2021 victory, when he was able to form a government largely on his own. His reform agenda has produced mixed results so far.

Opposition parties have repeatedly refused to govern with Kurti, criticizing his handling of relations with Western allies and his policies toward Kosovo's ethnically divided north, where a Serb minority lives.

Kurti, in turn, has blamed the opposition for the ongoing impasse.

Bedri Hamza, a former finance minister and new head of the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK), was Kurti's strongest challenger.

Hamza blends national values with liberal economic policies championing free markets, economic growth, a stronger private sector and social protection.

Voters in Kosovo cast ballots in an early parliamentary electionImage: Florion Goga/REUTERS

Funding and institutional deadlines loom

Failure to form a government would prolong the crisis at a critical moment. Lawmakers must elect a new president in April and ratify around €1 billion ($1.2 billion) in loan agreements with the European Union and the World Bank, which are set to expire in the coming months.

Kosovo has also faced financial pressure following tensions with Serbia in 2023, which prompted the EU to impose sanctions.

The bloc has said it will lift the measures after ethnic Serbian mayors were elected in northern municipalities, though the sanctions are believed to have cost Kosovo hundreds of millions of euros.

Campaign promises and voter disillusionment

During the campaign, Kurti pledged an extra month of salary per year for public sector workers, one billion euros annually in capital investment and the creation of a new prosecution unit to combat organized crime.

Opposition parties focused on promises to improve living standards. Many voters say they are disillusioned.

Edited by: Louis Oelofse, Saim Dušan Inayatullah, Rana Taha

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