Second, concerning the two-thirds of minority MPs required to pass a constitutional amendment (the second supermajority required), it represents a supermajority that is both broad and rather inclusive in terms of ethnic minorities represented in the Kosovo Parliament. A two-thirds majority of ethnic minority MPs, in fact, exceeds the number of seats that Serbs alone have in the current composition of Parliament. It means that, a two-thirds majority at the level of ethnic minority MPs is not a monopoly of Serbian MPs alone, with Serbs being the largest ethnic minority in Kosovo. This, therefore, suggests that the two-thirds minority MPs’ vote in Parliament is neither a prerogative of one ethnic community’s MPs, say Serbian MPs, nor an easily reachable bar from the perspective of other ethnic communities’ MPs. However, can the Kosovo Parliament remain without any ethnic minority MP and dismiss the supermajority required? No, the Kosovo Constitution offers twenty reserved seats for ethnic minority MPs, regardless of the popular vote results. The model of constitutional amendment provided by the provision concerned follows a power-sharing rationale, as does the entire Kosovo Constitution.