Parliamentary elections After five years of participating in Kosovo's political scene through protests and demonstrations, Vetëvendosje took the decision to participate in the
2010 Kosovan parliamentary election in its fifth anniversary as a political movement. After the decision was taken,
Albin Kurti got arrested by
EULEX in relation to the 10 February 2007 protest. Kurti would go on and get sentenced to 9 months in prison, but given that he had already spent 5 months in custody and another 5 in house arrest for the same case, he got released. Local and international observers detected many irregularities, including a participation rate of 95% certain municipalities, which were strongholds of the
PDK. Vetëvendosje and
LDK contested the election results in three voting centers and the elections got repeated in three municipalities, leading to a slight increase in the vote share of Vetëvendosje. Vetëvendosje and LB ended their coalition on 20 September 2011, after disagreements on distribution of funds. The two MPs from LB left the Vetëvendosje parliamentary group, reducing it to 12 members.
2014 parliamentary elections In the 2014 elections, Vetëvendosje received 13.59% (99,397 votes), remaining the third strongest political force in the
Kosovo Assembly with 16 seats. Despite PDK's electoral victory, Vetëvendosje, along with the
LDK-
AAK-
Nisma coalition, tried to thwart PDK by attempting to form a new government together. A decision by the
Constitutional Court of Kosovo that deemed
Isa Mustafa's election as
Chairman of the Assembly of Kosovo unconstitutional, led to the breakup of the LDK-AAK-Nisma coalition and LDK joining a coalition with PDK, in which Isa Mustafa assumed the position of
prime minister. This led to Vetëvendosje taking the role of leader of the opposition, with AAK and NISMA being part of it. The Vetëvendosje-led opposition was very aggressive, opposing the
border demarcation between Kosovo and Montenegro and the formation of the
Association of Serb Municipalities. LDK was accused of betraying the opposition and keeping PDK in power. The opposition organized massive
demonstrations on the streets, and it used tear-gas to block meetings of the parliament.
2017 parliamentary elections In the 2017 elections, Vetëvendosje received 27.49% (200,132 votes) making it the biggest political party in the
Kosovo Assembly with 32 seats. In comparison to the 2014 elections, Vetëvendosje doubled in size. Despite being the biggest individual party and parliamentary group, Vetëvendosje remained behind the
PANA coalition and remained in opposition. In 2018, 12 MPs left Vetëvendosje and created the
Group of the Independent Deputies, which would later join the
Social Democratic Party of Kosovo (PSD). In addition, Vetëvendosje MP Donika Kadaj-Bujupi rejoined
AAK. This split reduced the Vetëvendosje parliamentary group to 19 seats.
2019 parliamentary elections In the early elections of 2019 which were called due to the resignation of Prime Minister at the time
Ramush Haradinaj, Vetëvendosje received 26.27% (221,001 votes), remaining the biggest political party in the
Kosovo Assembly with 29 seats, despite its split one year prior to the elections. Its total number of votes increased by over 10% relative to the previous election, but due to a higher participation rate, it received a smaller share of seats in the assembly. Vetëvendosje formed a coalition with LDK in February 2020 after months of negotiations, with
Albin Kurti becoming
prime minister of Kosovo. After a disagreement about the handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, Kurti sacked the LDK minister Agim Veliu. In retaliation, LDK initiated a
motion of no confidence against the
Kurti government, which passed at the parliament and the Kurti government was overthrown. Apart from Veliu's sacking, LDK blamed Vetëvendosje for ruining Kosovo's relations with the US, after Kurti exchanged skirmishes with the US envoy for the Kosovo-Serbia dialogue,
Richard Grenell. Vetëvendosje remained in opposition and Kurti with the former government ministers from Vetëvendosje could not return to the parliament because they had resigned before taking executive roles, leaving them out of Kosovo's institutional life until the next election.
2021 parliamentary elections After the fall of the Kurti government, LDK, together with AAK, NISMA, the Serb List, and other minorities, formed a new government on 3 June 2020. The government was elected with 61 votes, which was the critical minimum required to form a government. In December 2020, the
Constitutional Court deemed the LDK-led government illegal, because one of the 61 MPs that voted for it had been convicted for corruption, meaning that he had lost his valid mandate before voting for the government. This led to new elections, which were held on 14 February 2021. Vetëvendosje ran together with
Guxo. Because of a conviction for setting off tear gas, Albin Kurti was not allowed to run for a seat at the parliament. Vetëvendosje won the elections and experienced a significant increase in its vote share, receiving 50.28% of the total votes. The common list of VV and Guxo gained 58 seats, with 51 for VV and 7 for Guxo. As two elected members of Guxo joined the government and Osmani was elected President, three of the Guxo seats went to the following names on the elected list, increasing VV number to 53. In April 2021, Adelina Grainca, former PDK deputy joined Vetëvendosje, increasing its number of MPs to 54.
Parliamentary election results Local elections 2013 local elections Vetëvendosje participated in the
2013 local elections, which marked Vetëvendosje's first ever participation in local elections.
Shpend Ahmeti from Vetëvendosje won the elections in the capital
Pristina over
LDK leader and former mayor
Isa Mustafa. Until then, Pristina was considered a LDK stronghold. Overall, Vetëvendosje came fourth with a decrease in votes in comparison to the 2010 parliamentary election. A session of the party's General Council was called on December 15, 2013 which between other things discussed these results as well as necessary action in response to them. According to Shpend Ahmeti's words during an interview with
Top Channel, there were also changes in the statute of Vetëvendosje, which came out of the General Council meeting.
2017 local elections In the
2017 local elections, Vetëvendosje won in three municipalities. Vetëvendosje won a second term in
Pristina with
Shpend Ahmeti and also won in
Prizren with Mytaher Haskuka and in
Kamenica with Qendron Kastrati. Prior to Vetëvendosje's victory, Prizren was ruled by
PDK for 18 years and was called PDK's 'Jerusalem'. Shpend Ahmeti and Qendron Kastrati left Vetëvendosje in early 2018 after the split of the movement. In the summer of 2019, Agim Bahtiri, mayor of
Mitrovica joined Vetëvendosje. After the resignation of mayor Agim Veliu, an extraordinary election was held in
Podujevë on 29 November 2020. Vetëvendosje's Shpejtim Bulliqi won the election and is now the mayor of Podujeva until the regular 2021 election.
2021 local elections Vetëvendosje participated in the
2021 local elections and won 4 municipalities and 193 municipal council positions. After the resignation of four mayors in the north of Kosovo and the subsequent boycott by the Serb local majority, Vetëvendoje won the
2023 elections in
Leposavić and
North Mitrovica, with a turnout of 1.06% and 4.62%, respectively. The election result was recognized by the US and other Western countries, but groups of local Serbs refused to allow the newly-elected mayors to enter their offices.
Kosovo government's decision to deploy the Special Operations Unit of the
Kosovo Police to the northern municipalities to enable the mayors to enter their offices led to international backlash and a clash between Kosovo and some of its Western partners. The
EU introduced some measures against the government of Kosovo. ==Controversies==