Chairman of the Assembly of Kosovo

The Chairman of the Assembly of Kosovo[a] (Albanian: Kryetari i Kuvendit të Kosovës, literally translated as President of the Assembly of Kosovo, or Albanian: Kryeparlamentari, literally translated as Speaker of the Parliament, Serbian: Председник Скупштине Косова/ Predsednik Skupštine Kosova, literally translated as President of the Assembly of Kosovo) is the head of Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo, who is elected by the parliament during the opening session. The current Chairwoman of the Assembly of Kosovo is Vjosa Osmani. The position also ranks first in the presidential line of succession.

Speaker of the Assembly of Kosovo
Incumbent
Vjosa Osmani

since 3 February 2020
StyleChairman/Chairwoman
Term lengthElected by the Assembly at the start of each legislature, and upon a vacancy
Inaugural holderNexhat Daci
Formation10 December 2001
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Kosovo
Constitution and law

Chairmen of the Assembly of Kosovo

# Portrait Name
(Born-Died)
Term of Office Party
1 Nexhat Daci
(b. 1944)
10 December 200110 March 2006Democratic League of Kosovo
2 Kolë Berisha
(b. 1947)
10 March 200612 December 2007Democratic League of Kosovo
3 Jakup Krasniqi
(b. 1951)
12 December 200717 July 2014Democratic Party of Kosovo
(until 2014)
Social Democratic Initiative
(from 2014)
Flora Brovina
(b. 1949)
17 July 20148 December 2014Democratic Party of Kosovo
4 Kadri Veseli
(b. 1966)
8 December 201429 June 2017Democratic Party of Kosovo
Adem Mikullovci
(b. 1939)
29 June 20177 September 2017Vetëvendosje
(4) Kadri Veseli
(b. 1966)
7 September 201722 August 2019Democratic Party of Kosovo
Jahja Kokaj
(b. 1948)
27 November 201926 December 2019Vetëvendosje
5 Glauk Konjufca
(b. 1981)
26 December 20193 February 2020Vetëvendosje
6 Vjosa Osmani
(b. 1982)
3 February 2020IncumbentDemocratic League of Kosovo
gollark: No.
gollark: The hilarity of a joke is directly proportional to the square of its length, you know.
gollark: (note: I like Linux and this is a joke, do not potato me)
gollark: What do Linux users do to change a lightbulb?First, a user creates a bug report, only for it to be closed with "could not reproduce" as the developers got to it in the day. Eventually, some nights later, someone realizes that it is actually a problem, and decides to start work on a fix, soliciting the help of other people.Debates soon break out on the architecture of the new lightbulb - should they replace it with an incandescent bulb (since the bulb which broke was one of those), try and upgrade it to a halogen or LED bulb, which are technically superior if more complex. or go to a simpler and perhaps more reliable solution such as a fire?While an LED bulb is decided on, they eventually, after yet more debate, deem off-the-shelf bulbs unsuitable, and decide to make their own using commercially available LED modules. However, some of the group working on this are unhappy with this, and splinter off, trying to set up their own open semiconductor production operation to produce the LEDs.Despite delays introduced by feature creep, as it was decided halfway through to also add RGB capability and wireless control, the main group still manages to produce an early alpha, and tests it as a replacement for the original bulb. Unfortunately it stops working after a few days of use, and debugging of the system suggests that the problem is because of their power supply - the bulb needs complex, expensive, and somewhat easily damaged circuitry to convert the mains AC power into DC suitable for the LEDs, and they got that bit a bit wrong.So they decide to launch their own power grid and lighting fixture standard, which is, although incompatible with every other device, technically superior, and integrates high-speed networking so they can improve the control hardware. Having completely retrofitted the house the original lightbulb failed in and put all their designs and code up on GitHub, they deem the project a success, and after only a year!
gollark: Minetest is already a thing.

See also

Notes

a.   ^ Kosovo is the subject of a territorial dispute between the Republic of Kosovo and the Republic of Serbia. The Republic of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence on 17 February 2008, but Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory. The two governments began to normalise relations in 2013, as part of the 2013 Brussels Agreement. Kosovo is currently recognized as an independent state by 97 out of the 193 United Nations member states. In total, 112 UN member states recognized Kosovo at some point, of which 15 later withdrew their recognition.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.