Kosovo's rating for electoral process improves from 5.25 to 4.75 owing to the success of the October elections to the Kosovo Assembly. International observers proclaimed the elections, which were administered by Kosovar-run bodies rather than the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), to be free and fair. Sufficient mechanisms to ensure a system of checks and balances among different institutions, including the SRSG and the OSCE, were established. All parties accepted the election results, the credibility of which was confirmed by a recount of votes at the central counting center. The major deficiency of these elections was a Belgrade-encouraged boycott by Serb voters, despite efforts by the OSCE and the PISG to make all possible concessions. It is important to note, however, that even with the boycott, two Serb parties participated in the election: the SLKM and the CLS.
The second elections for the Kosovo Assembly were held on October 23, 2004. Out of 1.39 million voters, 699,519 participated in the ballot (53 percent), with an almost absolute boycott by Kosovo Serb voters due to the intensive antielection campaign by the government of Serbia and the Serbian Orthodox Church.
As in previous elections since June 1999, this ballot was a well-organized example of a democratic, fair, and transparent electoral process. The legal basis for the second assembly elections is contained in the Constitutional Framework for the PISG and UNMIK Regulation 2004/12. Kosovo has a purely proportional electoral system with closed party lists in which voters elect party representation in the Kosovo Assembly. The Constitutional Framework of Kosovo enables representation of all ethnic groups in the legislature through the system of reserved seats for minority communities. Out of 120 seats in the assembly, the political parties and independent candidates run for 100; the remaining 20 seats are reserved for minority representation, 10 for Serb candidates and 10 for other non-Serb minorities.
Before the October elections, a network of civil society activists came together under the umbrella group Reforma 2004 to advocate for open party lists that identify each party's candidates. However, the campaign got under way long after Kosovo's political parties had successfully pressured the UNMIK to approve a proportional voting system with closed lists.
The main parties that participated in the elections were the LDK, the PDK, the AAK, and the Civic List ORA (initiated by civil society activists). In spite of an almost absolute boycott by Serb voters, two Serbian groups ran for seats in the Kosovo Assembly: the SLKM and the CLS. As a rule, all minority representatives run regularly for the assembly elections. The independence platform was the most moderate of all the parties, except for the Serbian ones, which hardly campaigned. Generally, there was more focus on issues of good governance, anticorruption, employment, health care, and agriculture. Each candidate had to submit a financial statement before running, and political parties could spend no more than ¬2.00 (US$ 2.40) per voter during the entire campaign.
The election's main features were the emergence of new political parties, a large number of independent candidates, and the dissolution of some minority coalitions. The Serbian coalition Povratak and the Bosniak coalition Vatan were replaced with the new initiatives SLKM and the coalition Vakat, respectively. A new Serb entity representing displaced Serbs, the CLS, was also created. The biggest success in this election was the Civic List ORA, founded by civil society activists and led by Veton Surroi, owner of the largest Kosovo Albanian newspaper and a national TV station.
Out of 32 political parties and independent candidates that participated in the assembly elections, 19 won seats, with 10 parties occupying regular seats and 9 minority parties contesting for the reserved seats. Though no independent candidates won seats, 5 newly formed political parties are represented. The results for the main parties are similar to those in the 2001 elections, except for the Serbs, whose boycott resulted in 12 lost seats. All main parties show a decrease in votes, though the PDK and the AAK increased their representation in the assembly.
The president and government are elected from the assembly in a secret ballot. Out of the three election rounds allowed for a single candidate, a two-thirds majority in the first two rounds and 50 percent plus one vote in the third round are needed to be elected. The president of the LDK, Ibrahim Rugova, was elected president of Kosovo in the third round owing to insufficient votes in the first two rounds. He was challenged symbolically by Rame Buja, candidate of the PDK. The government led by Ramush Haradinaj, president of the AAK, won 71 out of 120 votes in the assembly's first election round.
This year's elections were administered almost entirely by Kosovo-run bodies. At the end of 2003, the OSCE transferred this function to the Central Election Commission (CEC) secretariat, with the OSCE in an advisory role. The CEC, which is headed by the OSCE head of mission in Kosovo, consists of 11 members representing main political forces and ethnic communities represented in the Kosovo Assembly. Decisions in the CEC are taken by consensus and arbitrated by the CEC head. To provide a system of checks and balances, the UNMIK has created the Election Complaints and Appeals Commission (ECAC), an independent quasi-judicial body. After the preliminary results of the assembly elections were released on October 25, a number of tabulation errors were found and prompted the ECAC on October 29 to direct the CEC to order a recount. No attempted fraud was uncovered, and the final results were very close to those before the recount.
All observers, including the Council of Europe, the European Parliament, the UNMIK, and the OSCE, stated their satisfaction with the election process and turnout. SRSG Soren Jessen-Petersen said that "Kosovo has passed an exam of democracy giving a proof of its readiness to move forward in democratic governance and in meeting other standards." Speaking about the atmosphere in which the elections were held, Doris Pack, head of the European Parliament election-monitoring delegation, said, "Everyone should be proud of this election."
2004 KOSOVO ASSEMBLY ELECTION RESULTS
List of Party Names |
Number of Votes |
Percentage of Votes |
Number of Seats |
LDK: Democratic League of Kosovo |
313,437 |
45.42 |
47 |
PDK: Democratic Party of Kosovo |
199,112 |
28.85 |
29 |
AAK: Alliance for the Future of Kosovo |
57,931 |
8.39 |
9 |
ORA: Civic List ORA |
43,017 |
6.23 |
7 |
PSHDK: Albanian Christian Democratic Party |
12,427 |
1.8 |
2 |
KDTP: Turkish Democratic Party |
8,353 |
1.21 |
3 |
PD: Justice Party |
7,013 |
1.02 |
1 |
K. Vakat-Bosniak |
4,972 |
0.72 |
3 |
LPK: People's Movement of Kosovo |
4,526 |
0.66 |
1 |
Others |
35,759 |
5.00 |
18 |
Two Serb political parties participated in the 2004 ballot: the SLKM (8 reserved seats) and the CLS (2 reserved seats), consisting of Serb displaced persons in Serbia. Urged by the Serbian government and the Serbian Orthodox Church, Kosovo Serb voters opted for an almost absolute boycott of the election, with fewer than 1,000 ballots cast. In fact, the Serbian prime minister, Vojislav Kostunica, conditioned the participation of the Serb voters with the international endorsement of Belgrade's plan for ethnic autonomy for Kosovo Serbs, approved by the Serbian Parliament on April 29, 2004. Promises that elements of Belgrade's plan could be included in the Document for the Reform of the Local Government, endorsed by the Prishtina-led Working Group on Decentralization, did not convince Kostunica, who contended that Serb participation in the elections would be a blow to his government's efforts to push successfully for ethnic autonomy for Kosovo Serbs.
In the last moment, Serbian president Boris Tadic urged Kosovo Serbs to vote. This appeal was quickly undermined by the Serbian Orthodox Church, which promoted the boycott. Both the UNMIK and some Serbian politicians who participated in the elections reported various forms of voter pressure and coercion by antielection activists sponsored by Belgrade. Although the Constitutional Framework provided two Serb parties with 10 seats in the assembly, the seats remained vacant through the end of 2004.