By Vudi Xhymshiti*
On the first of May, I crossed the border into Albania beneath a sky that gave no sign of the political tempest looming just over the horizon. Tirana, its skyline caught somewhere between post-socialist entropy and capitalist sheen, pulsed with pre-election anxiety. A capital in rehearsed order, a republic in managed chaos. Beneath the freshly repainted façades and floral arrangements of public parks, the cracks in Albania’s democratic theatre had already begun to show. By May 11, the curtain rose not on an act of democratic triumph, but on a polished charade, meticulously staged and resolutely unchallenged by those who were meant to see through the illusion.
Edi Rama, the towering statesman-turned-showman, secured what officialdom called a “historic” fourth term in power1. With 52 percent of the vote and 82 seats in the 140-seat parliament, the Socialist Party claimed victory amid allegations of vote buying, abuse of public office, and systemic intimidation. The opposition cried foul; international observers expressed unease. Albania’s Special Anti-Corruption Structure, SPAK, confirmed it was investigating 39 cases tied to electoral misconduct. The European Commission called the vote “highly polarised” and noted a glaring lack of a level playing field2. And yet, by the time the ballots were still warm, the parade of congratulations from Europe had begun.
It was as if no one had been watching. Or perhaps they had watched just enough to choose indifference.
On May 17, barely a week after the election, European leaders descended upon Tirana for the European Political Community Summit. With Ukraine and Russia due to resume peace talks, and EU enlargement ostensibly on the agenda, one might have expected at least a polite pause in protocol—a moment of principle. Instead, the summit became a pageant of handshakes and hollow platitudes, where Albania’s own democratic emergency was artfully swept under the marbled carpets of the EPC conference tent. Emmanuel Macron, Keir Starmer, Ursula von der Leyen, and others jostled for airspace in a capital where air traffic had to be rerouted for the occasion3. But none found time to publicly question the legitimacy of an election mired in controversy.
When does diplomacy become complicity?
The symbolism of this summit, held in a country still under investigation for electoral fraud, was inescapable. That the European Union’s most powerful actors offered their implicit endorsement of Rama’s fourth term speaks to more than mere strategic oversight. It suggests a willingness, perhaps eagerness to embrace a Balkan strongman whose country, far from aspiring to EU values, increasingly resembles a narco-patronage state4. Rama has been lauded in Brussels and Washington alike for “regional stability,” for hosting Afghan refugees, for accepting migrants from Italy5. In return, he has been gifted impunity.
Is this the price of loyalty to the West? If so, the West should beware the cost.
In reality, what Edi Rama offers the European Union is not stability, but a false quietude, a stable instability, a landscape in which corruption is predictable, institutions are controlled6, and the illusion of governance is more comfortable than the truth. It is a familiar model. One already perfected in Budapest, where Viktor Orban continues to run what can only be called a semi-authoritarian state under the guise of EU membership. Another is taking shape in Bucharest. Serbia, meanwhile, is a vassal of the Kremlin, its nationalism underwritten, paradoxically, by European funds.
How did we get here?
The answer lies in the EU’s addiction to its own myth of expansion. Brussels insists that enlargement equals influence, that by bringing the Balkans into its orbit it will dilute the reach of Russia and China. But what we are witnessing is the inverse: a hollowing out of European values in favour of short-term geostrategic gain. What is a democracy but a banner to be waved on summits, while governments hostile to dissent, hostile to transparency, hostile even to electoral integrity are ushered into the salon of continental respectability?
Rama, a man once celebrated for his bohemian charm and artistic sensibility, now oversees an administration that has been credibly accused of using state institutions to surveil journalists, jail whistleblowers, and sell off national assets to dubious foreign actors with disturbing regularity7. The incinerator scandal, a grotesque saga of environmental abuse, misappropriation of funds, and judicial compromise—remains unresolved, its key architects either behind bars or conveniently exiled. The fact that this man, this government, this result, was not only accepted but actively applauded by Europe’s leading lights demands an answer.
Are we witnessing a European Union laundering its values in exchange for regional pliability? Or are we watching something more sinister: the silent collusion of a bloc willing to indulge Balkan autocracy as long as the trains run on time and the migrants stay put?
There is something viscerally wrong about the speed and enthusiasm with which EU leaders rushed to Tirana post-election. In normal times, a summit held under these circumstances would at least include symbolic language of accountability, calls for electoral transparency, support for investigative journalism, even concern for migration driven by state decay. But not this time. Not in Albania. Instead, we watched as Rama was embraced like a member of the family, the prodigal son returned with open ports, open pockets, and a closed media landscape. The optics alone are staggering.
Perhaps the EU is not sleepwalking, but sleep-trading: accepting a role for Albania as an unspoken buffer state, a place where Europe’s financial flows mix with Balkan cartels, where yachts dock on beaches cleared of environmental protections, and where a rising political elite owes more to oligarchy than to ideology. This is not the path to Brussels. This is the path to capture.
And in this dance of power and pretence, no one seems to be asking the hard questions. Why does the EU continue to subsidise a Serbian government openly aligned with Moscow?8 Why does it tolerate Orban’s Hungary, already functionally a Russian outpost? Why is Romania, once the Eastern anchor of NATO reliability, now flirting with the same illiberal architecture?9 Why is Edi Rama’s Albania being groomed for accession while it slides further away from democratic norms?10
These questions demand not just answers, but reckoning.
The Balkan region today is less a puzzle than a powder keg. Europe’s strategy of managed denial may yet prove catastrophic. What does it say about European resolve when a prime minister accused of shielding cartel-linked figures, installing a foreign national at the helm of state intelligence without citizenship or vetting, and eroding every pillar of press and judicial independence is not only spared criticism but granted centre stage?
The integrity of the European project is being rewritten not with declarations but with silence. In that silence, Rama’s Albania becomes both symbol and warning.
To the leaders who paraded through Tirana on May 17 with smiles and press statements, a simple question: where is your spine?
To preach European values abroad and abandon them at your doorstep is not diplomacy. It is duplicity. You are not saving the Balkans. You are selling them.
And history, when it comes to collect its receipts, will not forget your complicity.
/Argumentum.al