Prime Minister Edi Rama said that legal changes to prevent courts from suspending ministers and other constitutional positions have no connection to the Balluku case.
On this occasion, the Prime Minister stated that "we will deal with the suspension in order to reject, with the will of the majority in the assembly, the intervention in the territory of the executive branch."
Rama said that no one should think that they have both the power and the strength to strike at this governing majority.
"The spirit of the Constitution and the basic orientations of the Constitution are not enough, the practices of all the countries that we resemble are not enough, then an article should be made with all the definitions, function by function, so that there is no longer any possibility of interpretation. This is the reason why we are making this change. Whoever connects it to the specific case is making a mistake, the specific case has its own path, it has nothing to do with the suspension. But the suspension is unacceptable, and for this reason we will deal with the suspension to reject, with the will of the majority in the assembly, interference in the territory that is the responsibility of the executive power. No one should think that they have both the stone and the nut in their hands to hit this governing majority. Just as no one should think that this measure, or other measures to follow, have to do with our hesitation to support the independence of justice without reservation", said Rama