Week in Review: Endless Elections and Pyrrhic Victories
Week in Review: Endless Elections and Pyrrhic Victories
Preventing calamity
A woman votes in a polling station in Custendil, Bulgaria during the country’s parliamentary elections in October 2024. Photo: EPA/GEORGI LICOVSKI.
In under three weeks, Bulgarians will head to the polls in the eighth parliamentary election in five years, in a country tired of political fragmentation, instability and deadlock, and where trust in institutions has been worn down.
In this volatile situation, many observers are concerned about a repeat of the Romanian 2024 presidential election, where external interference was spotted at a late stage, leading to the annulment of the election mid-way through. In his opinion piece for Balkan Insight, Peter Horrocks warns that EU mechanisms should be activated well in advance to spot any social media manipulations, to prevent the further collapse of trust in the electoral process.
Read more: At Bulgaria’s Elections, is the EU Facing Another Digital Calamity? (March 27, 2026)
Electoral loop
Kosovo’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Glauk Konjufca, President Vjosa Osmani and Prime Minister Albin Kurti in September 2023. Photo: Kosovo Parliament.
Kosovo’s Constitutional Court has quashed a presidential decree dissolving parliament over its failure to elect a new president in time, and given the political parties another 34 days to complete the process. If the MPs fail to elect a president by April 28, a third parliamentary election in 15 months will be inevitable.
Can Kosovo snap out of its political limbo? The opportunity is there, but political analysts in Pristina seem to have little hope that political actors will grasp it. Kosovo appears destined to be heading towards yet more elections – with little to suggest that they will change much.
Read more: Kosovo MPs Get More Time to Elect President, But No Clear Way to Do It (March 27, 2026)
Pyrrhic victory
People waiting in line to cast their ballots in Kula, Serbia, March 29, 2026. Photo: BIRN/Katarina Baletic.
Last Sunday saw local elections held in 10 municipalities in Serbia, with around a quarter of a million voters eligible to vote. Amid a tense political standoff, both the ruling party and its opponents used the vote as an opportunity to test their support ahead of potential national elections.
However, as Aleksandar Ivkovic writes in his opinion piece for Balkan Insight, elections in Serbia – even local ones – increasingly look like a real battlefield instead of a metaphorical one. The ruling Progressives may have emerged victorious this time, but its narrow wins in traditional rural strongholds look more pyrrhic than convincing.
Read more: Hollow Victory: Serbia’s Local Elections Suggest Ruling Party is Losing its Invincible Aura (March 30, 2026)
Last hope?
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen at the UK-EU summit in London, May 2025. Photo: EPA/NEIL HALL/POOL.
Using the appeal of the EU to leverage public support is nothing new in Balkan accession hopefuls. But for the politically-embattled Labour Party to adopt a similar approach in post-Brexit Britain is highly unusual – a sign of desperation for the governing party.
Meanwhile, a right-wing newspaper in the UK has been expressing admiration for Aleksandar Vucic of Serbia, whose apparent refusal to “prostrate himself” before the EU is catching its eye.
Read more: Letter from London: Can Europe Save the Day for the UK Government? (April 2, 2026)
Growing hubs
The Port of Ploce in Croatia. Photo: Luka Ploce.
Croatia’s stunning Adriatic coastline has long been its chief tourism asset and a major boost to its economy. But the country’s coast – and ports in particular – are increasingly being utilised as a transport hub for the region.
The port of Rijeka has long been a gateway for goods heading in and out of the Balkans, as well as Central Europe. Other ports, such as the one at Ploce, far to the south, are being expanded as well. Meanwhile, amid changing oil and gas transport routes, Croatia’s oil and LNG terminals are also taking on an added importance.
Read more: Ships, Trains and Pipelines: Croatia Looks Beyond Tourism (April 1, 2026)
Controversial move
Chief Prosecutor Nenad Saveski (right) being formally sworn into office before parliament. Photo: Parliament of North Macedonia.
North Macedonia’s new Chief Prosecutor, Nenad Saveski, has hit the ground running with some controversial moves. His decision to remove prosecutor Lence Ristoska from two cases involving alleged illegal financing of the ruling VMRO-DPMNE party raises questions about whether the cases can be concluded before the statute of limitations on them expires August.
Some note with irony Saveski’s recent announcements that he is resilient to political pressure – when VMRO-DPMNE has long pushed for Ristoska’s removal from the cases. Time will tell whether this move was about efficiency, or politics.
Read more: North Macedonia Prosecutor’s Decision Puts Politically-Sensitive Cases at Risk (April 2, 2026)
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