Latest Opinion Poll for the Kosovo Election (UBO Consulting, June 15, 2024)

June 9, 2024 - June 15, 2024

1065 respondents

Next General Election in Kosovo: June 7, 2026

The next General Election in Kosovo takes place in 26 days.

Kosovo's Governing Coalition Retains Stable Majority

Based on the UBO Consulting projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 55.0% of the parliamentary seats.

Who is leading in the latest poll from UBO Consulting?

In Kosovo, a recent national poll by UBO Consulting places LVV at the forefront with 49.6%, trailed by PDK: 17%, LDK: 15.5%, AAK: 8.6% and LS: 3%. Other parties secure 6.3% of the votes.

Quality Check: How Reliable is the UBO Consulting Projection?

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PolitPro Score

UBO Consulting achieved a PolitPro Score of ? out of 100.

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Election Accuracy

On average, UBO Consulting's figures deviate by percentage points between their final pre-election polls and actual election results.

Potential Majorities and Coalition Scenarios

Electoral Threshold

Kosovo's electoral threshold is 5%.

LVV
Unknown
55.0%
PDK + LDK + AAK
Unknown
45.0%

Projected Parliamentary Composition (Source: UBO Consulting)

According to UBO Consulting data, 4 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Assembly of Kosovo: LVV with 66 representatives, PDK with 23 representatives, LDK with 20 representatives and AAK with 11 representatives.

The Electoral System in Kosovo

Kosovo's Parliament, the Kuvendi i Kosovës, consists of 120 members, each serving a four-year term. The electoral system features nationwide proportional representation with open lists. Out of 120 seats, 100 are contested by all parties, while 20 are specifically reserved for national minority representatives, including 10 for the Serb community. Voters cast a ballot for a party and can further select up to five individual candidates from that party's list, empowering citizens with direct influence over their chosen representatives.

Electoral Thresholds

Kosovo mandates a 5% national electoral threshold for political parties. To secure any of the 100 open seats, parties must clear this hurdle. This rule aims to prevent parliamentary fragmentation and facilitate stable government formation. Significantly, this 5% threshold does not apply to parties and initiatives representing national minorities vying for reserved seats, ensuring smaller ethnic communities gain parliamentary representation irrespective of their population size.

Government Formation and Traditions

Forming a government in Kosovo demands an absolute majority: at least 61 of the 120 parliamentary seats. Since no single party typically achieves this, coalitions are the standard. Post-election, the President nominates a Prime Minister candidate to Parliament, usually the leader of the strongest party. Constitutionally, the government must integrate representatives from national minorities, especially Serbs. This provision aims to bolster state stability and inclusivity, though it frequently triggers complex negotiations among political blocs.

Data Sources and Methodology

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