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Democratic Party of Kosovo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kosovar political party
Not to be confused withDemocratic League of Kosovo.
This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(October 2024)
Democratic Party of Kosovo
Partia Demokratike e Kosovës
AbbreviationPDK
ChairmanBedri Hamza
Parliamentary leaderAbelard Tahiri
FoundersHashim Thaçi
Founded10 October 1999; 26 years ago (1999-10-10)
HeadquartersPristina
Youth wingRinia Demokratike e Kosovës
Women's wingGruaja Demokratike e Kosovës
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right[6] toright-wing[9]
Regional affiliationLiberal South East European Network[10]
European affiliationALDE Party[11]
ECR Party (until 2022)
International affiliationLiberal International
Colours Sky blue
Assembly
24 / 120
Mayors
6 / 38
Municipal councils
208 / 994
Party flag
Website
www.pdk.info
Constitution andlaw

TheDemocratic Party of Kosovo (Albanian:Partia Demokratike e Kosovës;PDK) is one of the largestpolitical parties inKosovo. It was originally asocial-democratic party coming out of thedemilitarisedKosovo Liberation Army after theKosovo War, with most of the leadership coming from Albanian nationalists and former members of thePeople's Movement of Kosovo. However, during its congress in January 2013, it positioned itself as a centre-right party and is considered to be a conservative party.[12][13]The Democratic Party of Kosovo is headed byBedri Hamza since 17 November 2025.

History

[edit]

The party was founded on 10 October 1999 from the political wing of theKosovo Liberation Army as the Party for the Democratic Progress of Kosovo (Partia për Progres Demokratik e Kosovës), but was renamed on 21 May 2000. The party has increased in size and regional scope, initially winning the elections of 2007 and winning most of the regional elections in the municipal elections of 2009. PDK renewed its governing mandate after winning the elections of 2010.[14]

EnglishWikisource has original text related to this article:
1999 Logo of the Democratic Party of Kosovo

Members of the Party for the Democratic Progress of Kosovo (which was later called the Democratic Party of Kosovo) were blacklisted by the US under then-PresidentGeorge W. Bush in 2001.[15][16]

In the 2004legislativeelections, the party won 28.9% of the popular vote and 30 out of 120 seats in theAssembly of Kosovo; in 2007 PDK won a majority for the first time with 35% of the vote. In 2010's disputed elections, PDK won again with 32% of the vote.

After 14 years of leadership of Hashim Thaçi who had to resign from party leadership to take the position of the President of the country, in May 2016, Parliament SpeakerKadri Veseli became party president by acclamation. He was elected with no votes against and no abstentions.[17]

Elections in 2010

[edit]

Parliamentary elections were held on 12 December 2010, the first such elections organized in Kosovo since their declaration of independence. After early results,Hashim Thaçi, who was on course to gain 32 per cent of the vote, claimed victory for PDK, the Democratic Party of Kosovo. He said he intended to continue governing for another 4 years. After accusations of vote-rigging, voting was repeated in several municipalities. With more than 30 per cent of the vote, Thaçi formed a coalition with theNew Kosovo Alliance, led by the ex-president,Behgjet Pacolli. It was in fourth place with 8 percent of the popular vote.

The turnout at the election was significantly higher than usual, augmented by Serbs who decided to vote in the disputed republic.[18] Following the confirmation of the final election results, PDK and AKR formed a government with a program dedicated toEU integrations. The new government included many of the younger generation of PDK members, such as Bedri Hamza,Memli Krasniqi,Vlora Çitaku, Blerand Stavileci,Petrit Selimi, etc.

Controversies

[edit]
This"criticism" or "controversy" sectionmay compromise the article'sneutrality. Please helpintegrate negative information into other sections or removeundue focus on minor aspects throughdiscussion on thetalk page.(December 2022)

MPs Rrustem Mustafa and Latif Gashi resigned their offices in 2015 after receiving confirmed sentenced for war crimes.[19] In April 2016, PDK MP Azem Syla was sought for arrest in connection to a large criminal group which appropriated socially owned property located in Prishtina’s suburbs amounting 30 million EUR.[20]

Seven out of ten current mayors belonging to the PDK have been investigated, charged or convicted of abuse of office and other criminal activity. Sami Lushtaku of Skenderaj has been sentenced to 12 years for war crimes while he is being investigated for a corruption case. He ran for mayoral reelections and is serving in office both from prison. Nexhat Demaku of Drenas has been sentenced to one year and is being investigated in another case. Salim Jenuzi of Dragash was charged but found not guilty. Bajram Mulaku of Vushtrria and Begzad Sinani of Kamenica were investigated but not charged. Sinani is again under investigation for alleged illegal hunting. Former Lipjan mayor Shukri Buja was sentenced to four months suspended imprisonment for not declaring property to the Anti-Corruption agency, while Vitia Mayor Nexhmedin Arifi to 18 months suspended imprisonment for misuse of official position.[21] Xhabir Zharku of Kaçanik was convicted to three years in prison for threats related to a privatisation case and illegal possession of a firearm forcing him to resign his position but was allowed to escape to Sweden where he now lives.[22] Ramadan Muja of Prizren was convicted by a court of first instance. The case has been returned to retrial meanwhile Muja has run for and won a second term as mayor.[23] Former Ferizaj Mayor Bajrush Xhemajli started serving a two-year sentence in 2014 after being convicted for killing a person in a traffic accident in 2009.[24] The prosecution also investigated the former mayor of Gjilan Qemal Mustafa for road tenders but did not file charges. Sokol Bashota of Klina was being investigated for abuse of office in 2016.[21]

In 2000 the brother of PDK leader Hashim Thaçi Gani Thaçi was found during a raid in Prishtina with a million German marks (500,000 euros) in cash. The origin of the money was uncertain.[25]

Former Interior Minister Bajram Rexhepi was in office when about 1.5 million euros were embezzled is a case related to the production of passports by an Austrian company. Later about 200,000 of them were discovered in a chauffeur of Kadri Veseli.[26] Adem Grabovci, leader of PDK parliamentary group, was involved in the "Pronto" scandal, a leak of audio recordings of an EULEX investigation, in which Adem Grabovci, Hashim Thaçi and Vlora Çitaku discuss employment of an uncle of Grabovci, Curr Gjoci. Shortly afterwards, Gjoci was appointed Director of the University Clinical Centre in Prishtina. In another scandal Grabovci's sons beat several police officers. They were sentenced to a prison sentence of six months which converted to 3,000 EUR fine each.[27]

Leader of PDK, 1999–present

[edit]
#PresidentPortraitBorn–DiedTerm startTerm endTime in office
1Hashim Thaçi1968–27 October 199926 February 201616 years, 122 days
2Kadri Veseli1967–9 March 20165 November 20204 years, 241 days
Act.Enver Hoxhaj1969–5 November 20203 July 2021240 days
3Memli Krasniqi1980–3 July 202117 November 20254 years, 137 days
4Bedri Hamza1963–17 November 2025Present9 days

Election results

[edit]
YearVotes%Overall seats wonAlbanian seatsPosition+/–CoalitionGovernmentLeader
2001202,62225.7%
26 / 120
26 / 100
2ndIncrease 26CoalitionHashim Thaçi
2004199,11228.3%
30 / 120
30 / 100
Steady 2ndIncrease 4Opposition
2007196,20734.3%
37 / 120
37 / 100
Increase 1stIncrease 7Coalition
2010224,33932.1%
34 / 120
34 / 100
Steady 1stDecrease 3Coalition
2014222,18130.4%
37 / 120
37 / 100
Steady 1stIncrease 3Coalition
2017245,64633.74%
23 / 120
23 / 100
Decrease 3rdDecrease 14PANACoalitionKadri Veseli
2019178,63721.2%
24 / 120
24 / 100
Steady 3rdIncrease 1Opposition
2021148,28517.0%
19 / 120
19 / 100
Increase 2ndDecrease 5OppositionEnver Hoxhaj
Feb 2025196,35320.96%
24 / 120
24 / 100
Steady 2ndIncrease 5Bedri Hamza

References

[edit]
  1. ^Korhonen, Jani (3 October 2019)."Kosovan Elections: Fractured Alliances Cast Long Political Shadows".Europe Elects.
  2. ^abcZulfaj, Jeton; Mulliqi, Brikena; Shala, Mentor; Tahiri, Petrit (15 April 2008).Political Parties in Kosova – Profile and Ideology(PDF). Çelnaja. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved27 December 2019.
  3. ^Greater Albania - bogeyman or a pipe dream?, Deutsche Welle, 2017-05-04 (in English)
  4. ^Nordsieck, Wolfram (2014)."Kosovo".Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived fromthe original on 17 January 2013.
  5. ^Nordsieck, Wolfram (2014)."Kosovo".Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived fromthe original on 28 September 2014.
  6. ^"Kosovo centre-right coalition on course to win parliamentary vote".reuters.com. Reuters. 11 June 2017.
  7. ^"Kosovo | European Election Watch".Center for Strategic and International Studies. 2019.
  8. ^Hoare, Liam (20 February 2013)."Why Kosovo Still Matters".The Atlantic.
  9. ^[2][7]
    Untilc. 2013:
    Centre-left[8]
  10. ^"PDK anëtarësohet në rrjetin e Partive Liberale të Evropës Juglindore".Raporto Korrupsionin! KALLXO.com. 2022-05-14. Retrieved2022-05-15.
  11. ^"Liberal leaders discuss key issues at ALDE Party Council Meeting".ALDE Party.
  12. ^PDK profilizohet si parti e Qendrës së Djathtë (DPK positions itself as a center-right party) (in Albanian), Gazeta Express, 27 January 2013
  13. ^PDK, parti e qendrës së djathtë (DPK, a centre-right party) (in Albanian), Koha TV, 2013-01-27
  14. ^dDH's 'Hope'; Kosova Crisis 2000; BPT-Reports: Monthly report # 15
  15. ^Wikisource:Executive Order 13219
  16. ^"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved2010-12-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^Matoshi, Albatrit (7 May 2016)."Kadri Velseli kryetar i ri i PDK-së".Zëri. Retrieved7 May 2016.
  18. ^Agencies: "Ex-guerrilla chief claims victory in Kosovo election", Euractiv.
  19. ^"Edhe Rrustem Mustafa dorëzon mandatin e deputetit".Telegrafi.com. Archived fromthe original on 3 February 2016. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  20. ^"Police raids the home of former KLA leader and MP Azem Syla".Prishtina Insight. BIRN Kosovo. 27 April 2016. Retrieved28 April 2016.
  21. ^ab"Pak nga kryetarët e komunave që udhëhiqen nga PDK-ja nuk e shkelën ligjin".KOHAnet. KOHA. 5 February 2016. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  22. ^"Përpëlitjet e Xhabirit".Gazeta Express. MediaWorks. 19 October 2012. Archived fromthe original on 8 February 2016. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  23. ^Kryeziu, Petrit (24 December 2015)."Supremja Kthen në Apel Vendimin për Ramadan Mujën".Kallxo. BIRN. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  24. ^"Bajrush Xhemajli shkon në vuajtje të dënimit me burg".Telegrafi.com. 17 November 2014. Archived fromthe original on 8 February 2016. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  25. ^Mappes-Niediek, Norbert (29 November 2001)."Wundersamer Waschsalon".Die Ziet. No. 49/2001. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  26. ^Wölfl, Adelheid (14 January 2013)."Neuer Anlauf für Kosovo-Pässe". Der Standard. Retrieved7 February 2016.
  27. ^"Dënohen djemtë e Adem Grabovcit".Telegrafi.com. 18 May 2015. Archived fromthe original on 8 February 2016. Retrieved7 February 2016.
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