2004 Kosovan presidential election

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2004 Kosovan presidential election

 2002
3 December 2004
2006 

120 members of the Assembly of Kosovo
81 (two-thirds of 120 in first two rounds)
or 61 (simple majority of 120 in third round) votes needed to win
 
Nominee Ibrahim Rugova Ramë Buja
Party Democratic League of Kosovo Democratic Party of Kosovo
Electoral vote 66, 63, 64 34, 34, Withdrew in 3rd round
Percentage 66.7%

President before election

Ibrahim Rugova
LDK

Elected President

Ibrahim Rugova
LDK

An indirect election for the President of the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government in Kosovo was held on 3 December 2004 by the 120-member Assembly of Kosovo. This was not an election for the president of an independent state, but rather for the presidency of the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government (PISG) operating strictly under the administration of the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK), in accordance with United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244.[1]

This was the second presidential election held under the UNMIK-administered Constitutional Framework for Provisional Self-Government in Kosovo. It directly followed the 23 October 2004 parliamentary elections, which established the second mandate of the PISG assembly.[2]

Unlike the 2002 Kosovan presidential election, which utilized an open-ballot package deal to elect the president and government simultaneously without counter-candidates, the 2004 election featured a direct opposition candidate. The incumbent president, Ibrahim Rugova of the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), was symbolically challenged by Ramë Buja, nominated by the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK). After neither candidate secured the requisite 80-vote two-thirds majority in the first two rounds of secret voting, Buja withdrew from the race. Rugova was subsequently re-elected in the third round with 64 votes out of the 99 ballots cast, successfully securing the simple majority of the 120-member Assembly necessary to win.[3][4]

Serbian minority boycott

The 2004 Kosovan presidential election was a direct constitutional consequence of the parliamentary elections held on 23 October 2004. Following the conclusion of the first three-year mandate of the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government (PISG), the October elections necessitated the formation of a new legislative and executive branch strictly governed by the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) under the Constitutional Framework for Provisional Self-Government. In contrast to the 2001 elections, the 2004 parliamentary elections were administered almost entirely by Kosovo-run bodies, with the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) having transferred administrative functions to the Central Election Commission (KQZ) secretariat in late 2003.[5]

The political climate preceding the presidential election was highly dynamic and marked by a significant shift in Kosovo's post-war political landscape. Following the parliamentary elections, the moderate Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), led by the incumbent President Ibrahim Rugova, emerged once again as the largest political force, securing 47 out of 120 seats in the Assembly of Kosovo. However, falling short of an absolute majority, the LDK was compelled to seek coalition partners to form a government and secure the necessary votes for the presidency.

This period saw intense political negotiations and a departure from the previous broad, all-inclusive unity government model that had characterized Kosovo's first PISG mandate. President Rugova and the LDK opted to form a "narrow" center-right governing coalition with the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo (AAK), led by Ramush Haradinaj, alongside several non-Serb minority parties. Under this power-sharing agreement, it was stipulated that Ibrahim Rugova would retain the position of President of Kosovo, while Ramush Haradinaj would be mandated as the new Prime Minister of Kosovo. This strategic alliance fundamentally altered the relations between the major Albanian political parties. The Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK), led by Hashim Thaçi, which had secured 30 seats to become the second-largest party, vehemently opposed the LDK-AAK pact. The PDK had advocated for a broad unity coalition and, upon being excluded from the executive arrangement, declared its intention to act as a formidable parliamentary opposition. This marked a maturing phase in Kosovo's political development, establishing a clear government-opposition dynamic for the first time since the establishment of the UNMIK administration.[6][7]

In contrast with the government formed following the 2002 election, which resulted from international pressure after Kosovo's inability to agree on a viable formula, the 2004 government was elected entirely through the free will of Kosovo Assembly members. The opposition consists of two main parties, the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK) and Party ORA. The emergence of the newly formed reformist party ORA, led by Veton Surroi, which secured 7 seats and also joined the opposition bloc, further fragmented the Assembly, making the numerical threshold for electing the president highly dependent on strict coalition loyalty. Consequently, when the inaugural session of the Assembly convened in early December to elect the President, the process was highly polarized. Unlike the 2002 election where the president was elected through a consensus package deal, the 2004 election was contested, with the opposition PDK fielding Ramë Buja as a counter-candidate specifically to challenge Rugova's dominance and protest the LDK-AAK political monopoly.[8]

The 120-seat Assembly constitutionally reserved 20 seats for ethnic minorities (10 for Serbs, and 10 for other non-Serb communities). However, the participation of the Kosovo Serb community in the 2004 process was severely hindered by a strict boycott. Citing poor security conditions, lack of freedom of movement, and direct political directives from the government in Belgrade (specifically from Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica), the local Serb population overwhelmingly refused to vote.[5]

Voter turnout among the Serb demographic collapsed to less than 1%. Despite this, the UNMIK Constitutional Framework legally required the 10 set-aside Serb seats to be allocated. They were given to the only two participating Serb entities: the Serbian List for Kosovo and Metohija (SLKM) led by Oliver Ivanović received 8 seats, and the Citizens' Initiative of Serbia (CIS) led by Slaviša Petković received 2 seats, drawing a combined total of fewer than 2,000 votes overall. While these representatives officially took office, ensuring institutional continuity, they functioned with minimal popular legitimacy and largely abstained from the Assembly's plenary sessions, including heavily boycotting the December presidential vote.[7][9]

Electoral system

The President was elected indirectly by the 120 members of the Assembly of Kosovo.[10]

To formally enter the race, a candidate needed the backing of either the largest political party in the Assembly or at least 25 signatures from the Assembly's deputies. At the time of the 2004 election, the Constitutional Framework stipulated that the President's mandate would last for exactly 3 years (this was later amended to 5 years prior to the 2008 election).

The election procedure mandated a secret ballot:

  • First and Second Rounds: A candidate was required to receive a two-thirds supermajority of the votes from all 120 registered members of the Assembly (meaning 81 votes were needed to win).
  • Third Round: If no candidate managed to achieve the 80-vote threshold after two rounds of voting, a third round would be organized. In this final round, the requirement was lowered to a simple majority of all 120 members of the Assembly (61 votes).

If a candidate failed to secure 61 votes in the third round, the Assembly would be automatically dissolved, and extraordinary parliamentary elections would be called.[4]

Candidates

  • Ibrahim Rugova (LDK): The incumbent president, historically regarded as the leader of the peaceful Albanian resistance in the 1990s, and the head of the LDK. Rugova was the consensus candidate of the newly formed LDK-AAK governing coalition.
  • Ramë Buja (PDK): A prominent figure within the PDK, a former KLA official, and a member of the Kosovo Albanian delegation at the 1999 Rambouillet talks. Buja was nominated by the PDK specifically to symbolically challenge Rugova and protest the LDK-AAK power-sharing agreement, ensuring that Rugova would not run completely uncontested.[7]
Democratic League of Kosovo
For President
Ibrahim Rugova
President of the PISG
Democratic Party of Kosovo
For President
Ramë Buja
Member of Assembly

Session and Voting

Aftermath

References

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