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Forum2025-02-21 20:12:00

Why does the Prime Minister fear the presence of SPAK in the elections?

Shkruar nga Lutfi Dervishi

Why does the Prime Minister fear the presence of SPAK in the elections?

After all, the prime minister is an artist and transparency is not for artists. The artist dreams. The artist creates, the audience interprets. Creation is mystery. Creation is magic...

Why does the Prime Minister call the presence of BKH officers and SPAK prosecutors in the field during the election campaign surveillance?

Our parties are not illegal.

The Prime Minister is probably afraid that SPAK and prosecutors will unravel the biggest mystery of the elections: How are votes bought in a market where prices have skyrocketed?

Maybe the prime minister doesn't want the people to learn the shocking truth that a vote is no longer just a bag of flour or a paid electricity bill. Times have changed. Maybe today a vote comes with a year's Netflix subscription, a hypothetical document, or a job?

The Prime Minister said that political surveillance is a return to dark times.

Perhaps he sees himself as an artist who makes sure his masterpieces aren't "surveilled" before they're finished. He knows that every creative process requires an element of mystery, a "wow" moment where the final result is revealed at the ballot box.

If prosecutors start looking closely, then the magic is broken.

After all, the prime minister is an artist, and transparency is not for artists. The artist dreams. The artist creates, the audience interprets. Creation is mystery. Creation is magic.

And perhaps, to save his masterpiece, the Prime Minister will distance himself from transparency, preferring the darkness of abstract political art, where everything is relative and nothing is as it seems.

In every electoral campaign we have seen the strengthening of the lek and the weakening of the euro. The presence of investigators in the campaign could weaken the lek and... God forbid, reduce the value of the vote!

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