
Independent institutions will spend June and July quietly, as they will not appear in Parliament to account for their activities during 2024.
This annual report should have been done in the spring, but the MPs were on the campaign trail, and now after it, most are disappointed that they will not be in the new Parliament and have abandoned their constitutional duties at the end of the mandate.
This has caused the socialist majority to change the Assembly's work plan and postpone the reporting of independent institutions until September, when the new MPs will be sworn in and begin work.
For example, the highest-profile authority, SPAK, will not report to the laws committee on June 24, as scheduled. It is learned that Altin Dumani, like the other heads of independent institutions, will be summoned in September.
If he were to come now, the head of the special prosecution would have to appear before the Laws Commission, whose chairwoman, Klotilda Bushka, is under investigation by SPAK, and she is not the only one.
The list under SPAK's net is joined by left and right: from Plarent Ndreca, Damian Gjiknuri, Olta Xhçka to Fatmir Mediu, Asllan Dogjani and Monika Kryemadhi.
The Assembly's work calendar provides for two more sessions, one on June 26 and a final one on July 3, and neither of them foresees reporting by the heads of institutions or the adoption of resolutions for them.
After the elections, parliamentary committees and plenary sessions have had difficulty holding meetings due to the lack of MPs, especially those who realized after May 11 that they would no longer be MPs in the next four-year term.
More than half of the chamber, 82 current MPs, will not return in September: 45 PS, 34 PD and 3 PSD./ Report Tv
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