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The key pillars of Montenegro’s new government will be the rule of law and economic development, Prime Minister-designate Dritan Abazovic said in a speech submitted to the Montenegrin Parliament.
The new government of this country is expected to be elected in a parliamentary session, which will be held on April 28 in Cetina.
It is expected to include Abazovic’s Civic Movement URA, the pro-Serb People’s Socialist Party, the Social Democratic Party and the Albanian and Bosniak national parties.
The new government is expected to have 46 deputies, out of a total of 81 in the Montenegrin Assembly.
The government is also expected to have parliamentary support from Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic’s Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS).
But she is strongly opposed by the pro-Serbian and pro-Russian Democratic Front, as well as the Democrats – two entities that have formed the current governing coalition.
Abazovic’s report states that in the first quarter of the new Government’s work, a draft law on population census is planned, in line with European standards.
The census causes tensions in Montenegro, because for a part of the political opinion it is not a statistical issue, but a matter of national and religious census.
In the area of foreign policy priorities, Abazovic mentions the establishment of the Ministry of European Affairs, with the aim of reportedly better coordinating and communicating with the EU negotiating structure.
“I believe that Montenegro can demand an accelerated accession [në BE] “that with urgent but wise decisions, he can become a full member soon,” Abazovic said.
Among the priorities of his Government is the agreement on holders of judicial office, then the Law on the Origin of Property, electoral reform, review of the current situation in education and culture, and others.
Abazovic was nominated as prime minister of Montenegro’s new government on March 3rd by the country’s president, Milo Djukanovic.
Previously, the motion of no confidence in the previous Government was passed in the Assembly with the votes of the Abazovic URA and the opposition led by Djukanovic’s DPS.
The ousted government, led by Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapic, was formed in December 2020 by a coalition between the Democratic Front, Democrats and the URA Civic Movement.
This Government had a narrow majority in the Assembly – of 41 deputies – but turned the DPS into opposition after three decades.
Differences in attitudes between coalition partners began to emerge very soon after its formation and the parties often were not unanimous in decisions.
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