Bulgaria & Romania

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bulgaria & Romania Romania (România) and Bulgaria (Republika Bǎlgarija) Recent history Communist rule in Romania ended on Christmas Day 1989 with the execution of dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu. Earlier in the same year, Bulgaria’s Communist leader, Todor Zhivkov left office. The events triggered the beginnings of democratic reform and in 1991 both countries adopted new constitutions establishing democratic structures and a market economy. Romania changed its constitution again in 2003 in order to bring its law in line with EU standards. Nonetheless, both countries suffered from a slow pace of economic reform and continued political corruption in the aftermath of communism. Bulgaria in particular suffered severe economic difficulties during the 1990s, which saw 600,000 Bulgarians, many of them qualified professionals, leave the country. However, after applying for EU membership in 1995, it gradually stabilised, particularly between 2001-05, under the leadership of former Tsar Simeon II, Simeon Sakskobuggotski. By 2005, the EU was satisfied that both Romania and Bulgaria had embraced sufficient reform for their Accession Treaties to be ratified. Both countries became full members of the EU on 1 January 2007. Bulgaria: key facts How does a General Election actually work? Capital Sofia The UK is a liberal democracy. This means that we democratically elect politicians, who Population 7 million (2014) represent % of our total interests. EU population It also involves that1.4 individual% rights are protected. Official languages Bulgarian The type of liberal democracy we have is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of Year of EU accession 2007 100 the monarch are limited by the terms and conditions put down in the constitution. Currency Bulgarian lev BGN 67 7.7% Schengen Area member No Seats in European Parliament 17 Current government Parliamentary system Romania and Bulgaria are both semi-presidential republics. In both countries, executive powers are shared between The UK has a parliamentary system of democratic governance. Unlike presidential and the President and the government, which is headed by the Prime Minister. The Presidents of Romania and Bulgaria are directly elected and serve as thesemi Head-presidential of State and systems, Comma therender is- inan-Chief interconnection of the armed between forces. However,the legislative they (lawcannot- initiate legislation, only returnmaking) laws proposed and executive by Parliament (law-enforcing) for reconsideration. branches of Ingovernment Bulgaria, the in aParliament parliamentary is unicameral and consists of 240system. deputies, In the elected UK, this every means four thatyears. the In executive Romania there(consisting are two of thechambers Queen –and the the Senate, which has 137 members, and thegovernments Chamber ofof Deputies,England, Scotland, which has Wales 332 members. and Northern Ireland) is accountable to the The current Bulgarian Presidentlegislature is Rosen orPlevneliev, Parliament who (House was elected of Commons, in October House 2011 of Lordsand took and office devolved in January Assemblies 2012. in The Prime Minister is Boiko Borisov, leader of the centre-right Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria party Wales and Northern Ireland). (GERB), which won the October 2014 general election. This election was called only about a year after the 2013 general election, which resulted in a weak coalition and a series of protests. Appointed Prime Minister (or chancellor) as Head of Government and a monarch (or Romania faced political turmoil in 2007 when President Traian Băsescu was accused of ‘violating the constitution’, but Romanians voted against impeachingceremonial him president)at a referendum as Head in ofMay State. 2007. Băsescu was re-elected in 2009 following a close presidential election. In November 2014, the current President Klaus Iohannis was elected. The Prime Minister, currently Victor Ponta, was appointed by the President following a vote of no confidence against his predecessor, Mihai Răzvan Ungureanu, in April 2012. Ungureanu’s cabinet had only been in place for two months before he lost the vote. Ponta, of the Social Democratic Party, remained in office following the December 2012 election in which his party won an absolute majority in both the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. He currently leads his fourth cabinet in a coalition with the centre-left NationalFirst-Past Union-The for -thePost Progress of Romania, the centre-right Conservative Party and Liberal Reformist Party. Members of Parliament in the House of Commons are elected using the first-past-the- . post electoral system. Each of the 650 voting constituencies in the UK are represented by Romania : key facts an MP. During the general and most local elections, the candidate with most of the votes Capital Bucharest becomes the local representative. Candidates campaign door-to-door, hold debates and Population 20 million (2014) publish % manifestos of total EU population (comparable to shopping3.9 list% of what they are planning to do once they areOfficial in power). languages Eligible voters, about 46mRomanian in the UK, receive their polling card once they registerYear of online,EU accession or they can vote by post.2007 Currency Romanian Leu RON Party withSchengen most Area of the member votes is invited by theNo Queen to form a government. If there is no clear winner,Seats in thereEuropean is a hungParliament Parliament. In32 this case, a minority or coalition government can be formed. A minority government does not have an overall majority in Parliament. A © CIVITAS Institute for the Study of Civil Society 2015 EU Country Profiles More EU factsheets: http://www.civitas.org.uk/eufacts/index.phpcoalition government means that two or more political parties Author: agree James to Gubb, share 04/2007 power in Book EU events: http://www.civitas.org.uk/eufacts/EUevents.php Last update: Anna Sonny, 06/2015 government. If that does not work out, new elections may be called. Romania (România) and Bulgaria (Republika Bǎlgarija) Unemployment rate Public budget deficit/surplus GDP per capita in PPS (2015) 0 (2013) 100 -1 10.1% 9.8% 6.9% -2 EU 55 45 -3 B -4 R -5 B R EU -6 R B EU 2011 2012 2013 2014 Relations with the EU When the Commission reachedHow its final does decision a to General admit Romania Election and Bulgaria actually into the EU, work? it was tempered by concern that the countries hadThe not UK completed is a liberal necessary democracy. reforms. This means In fact, that the we Commission democratically has threatened elect politicians, to impose who penalties and withhold development funds unless both governments continue necessary reforms to their justice represent our interests. It also involves that individual rights are protected. systems, taxation and agriculture. High-level corruption also remains an issue of concern, exemplified by the 2007 debacle in Romania between President Tarieanu and PM Băsescu. In May 2008, EU representatives examined the The type of liberal democracy we have is a constitutional monarchy, where the powers of judicial systems of the two countries and as a result it suspended millions of euros worth of funding to Bulgaria until it the monarch are limited by the terms and conditions put down in the constitution. reduced its level of corruption. Romania’s Labour Minister was sacked for bribery in September 2008. Both countries tend to blame their continued problems on the legacy of communist-era governments and the disruption caused by the Balkan Wars of the 1990s. For example, in March 2009, Romania’s President, Traian Băsescu, said that the country’s ‘huge bureaucracy’ stopped EU funds from being used effectively. The EU’s main concern is that a failure to address shortcomings on the partParliamentary of Bulgaria or systemRomania will undermine the values that the EU itself is supposed to stand for. The UK has a parliamentary system of democratic governance. Unlike presidential and semi-presidential systems, there is an interconnection between the legislative (law- Facts and figures making) and executive (law-enforcing) branches of government in a parliamentary 40.4% of the Romanian populationsystem. In was the consideredUK, this means to be that at risk the ofexecutive poverty (consistingin 2013. This of isthe the Queen highest and figure the in the EU, where the average acrossgovernments all member of England,states is 24.5Scotland,% Wales and Northern Ireland) is accountable to the Both Romania and Bulgarialegislature have had or above Parliament average (House economic of Commons, growth since House 2007, of Lords the year and of devolved their accession Assemblies in Wales and Northern Ireland). Romanian exports (2015) AppointedRomanian Prime imports Minister (2015) (or chancellor)Bulgarian as exports Head of (2015) Government Bulgarian and a monarch imports (or (2015) ceremonial president) as Head of State. 25% 29% 37% 38% From EU To EU states From EU To EU states states states To non-EU From non- To non-EU From non- 62% states EU states states 63% EU states 71% First-Past-The-Post75% Members of Parliament in the House of Commons are elected using the first-past-the- post electoral system. Each of the 650 voting constituencies in the UK are represented by Technical Terms Accession Treaty: treaty endorsingan MP. finalDuring membership the general of the and European most Union. local elections,It does not comethe candidate into force on with the day most it is ofsigned the butvotes on a pre-arranged date. becomes the local representative. Candidates campaign door-to-door, hold debates and PPS: GDP per head is expressedpublish in Purchasing manifestos Power (comparable Standards (PPS) to toshopping eliminate list the ofdifferences what they in price are levels planning between to docountries once allowing meaningful volume comparisons of GDP between countries Links they are in power). Eligible voters, about 46m in the UK, receive their polling card once http://www.government.bg/fce/index.shtml?p=0023&s=001they register online, or they can vote by post. http://gov.ro/en/ http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat Party with most of the votes is invited by the Queen to form a government.
Recommended publications
  • Anti-Corruption Policies Revisited Computer Assiste
    EU Grant Agreement number: 290529 Project acronym: ANTICORRP Project title: Anti-Corruption Policies Revisited Work Package: WP 6 Media and corruption Title of deliverable: D 6.1 Extensive content analysis study on the coverage of stories on corruption Computer Assisted Content Analysis of the print press coverage of corruption In Romania Due date of deliverable: 30 June, 2016 Actual submission date: 30 June, 2016 Authors: Natalia Milewski , Valentina Dimulescu (SAR) Organization name of lead beneficiary for this deliverable: UNIPG, UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI PERUGIA Project co-funded by the European Commission within the Seventh Framework Programme Dissemination level PU Public X PP Restricted to other programme participants (including the Commission Services) RE Restricted to a group specified by the consortium (including the Commission Services) Co Confidential, only for members of the consortium (including the Commission Services) The information and views set out in this publication are those of the author(s) only and do not reflect any collective opinion of the ANTICORRP consortium, nor do they reflect the official opinion of the European Commission. Neither the European Commission nor any person acting on behalf of the European Commission is responsible for the use which might be made of the following information. 1 CONTENTS 1. The Analysed Media p. 3 2. Most used keywords p.4 3. Most frequent words p.5 4. Word associations p. 13 5. Evolution over time p. 25 6. Differences among the observed newspapers p. 29 7. Remarks on the influence that the political, judicial and socio-cultural systems have on p. 33 the manner in which corruption is portrayed in Romanian media 8.
    [Show full text]
  • Romania Redivivus
    alexander clapp ROMANIA REDIVIVUS nce the badlands of neoliberal Europe, Romania has become its bustling frontier. A post-communist mafia state that was cast to the bottom of the European heap by opinion- makers sixteen years ago is now billed as the success story Oof eu expansion.1 Its growth rate at nearly 6 per cent is the highest on the continent, albeit boosted by fiscal largesse.2 In Bucharest more politicians have been put in jail for corruption over the past decade than have been convicted in the rest of Eastern Europe put together. Romania causes Brussels and Berlin almost none of the headaches inflicted by the Visegrád Group—Czechia, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia— which in 1993 declined to accept Romania as a peer and collectively entered the European Union three years before it. Romanians con- sistently rank among the most Europhile people in the Union.3 An anti-eu party has never appeared on a Romanian ballot, much less in the parliament. Scattered political appeals to unsavoury interwar traditions—Legionnairism, Greater Romanianism—attract fewer voters than do far-right movements across most of Western Europe. The two million Magyars of Transylvania, one of Europe’s largest minorities, have become a model for inter-ethnic relations after a time when the park benches of Cluj were gilded in the Romanian tricolore to remind every- one where they were. Indeed, perhaps the aptest symbol of Romania’s place in Europe today is the man who sits in the Presidential Palace of Cotroceni in Bucharest. Klaus Iohannis—a former physics teacher at a high school in Sibiu, once Hermannstadt—is an ethnic German head- ing a state that, a generation ago, was shipping hundreds of thousands of its ‘Saxons’ ‘back’ to Bonn at 4,000–10,000 Deutschmarks a head.
    [Show full text]
  • Symposia Conference Book
    icd institute for cultural diplomacy The 2013 Symposia on Cultural Diplomacy “The Potential for Cultural Diplomacy in Supporting National and International Governance” (Berlin, Ankara, Istanbul, Bucharest, Rome, Washington, D.C., New York City, Brussels, London; May-August 2013) The International Symposia on Cultural Diplomacy 2013 “The Potential for Cultural Diplomacy in Supporting National and International Governance” (Berlin, Ankara, Istanbul, Bucharest, Rome, Washington, D.C., New York City, Brussels, London; May-August 2013) Table of Contents Introduction The International Symposia on Cultural Diplomacy 2013 is now 5 years old Introduction ........................................................................................... 2 and has become the world’s largest event in the field of Cultural Diplomacy. The sixth Symposia took place in 2013 and included large-scale events tak- Conference Summaries ing place in different major capital cities in cooperation with governments, leading academic institutions and civil society organizations throughout the Symposium on Cultural Diplomacy in the Mediterranean ........... 3 months of May - July 2013. Symposium on Cultural Diplomacy in Germany ........................... 5 Symposium on Cultural Diplomacy in the Levant ......................... 7 The focus of the 2013 symposia was to explore the potential for cultural di- Symposium on Cultural Diplomacy & Human Rights..................... 9 plomacy to successfully support national and international governance; and Symposium on Cultural
    [Show full text]
  • Post-Communist Romania: a Peculiar Case of Divided
    www.ssoar.info Post-communist Romania: a peculiar case of divided government Manolache, Cristina Veröffentlichungsversion / Published Version Zeitschriftenartikel / journal article Empfohlene Zitierung / Suggested Citation: Manolache, C. (2013). Post-communist Romania: a peculiar case of divided government. Studia Politica: Romanian Political Science Review, 13(3), 427-440. https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-448327 Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Dieser Text wird unter einer CC BY-NC-ND Lizenz This document is made available under a CC BY-NC-ND Licence (Namensnennung-Nicht-kommerziell-Keine Bearbeitung) zur (Attribution-Non Comercial-NoDerivatives). For more Information Verfügung gestellt. Nähere Auskünfte zu den CC-Lizenzen finden see: Sie hier: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.de Post-Communist Romania 427 Post-Communist Romania A Peculiar Case of Divided Government CRISTINA MANOLACHE If for the most part of its post-communist history, Romania experienced a form of unified government based on political coalitions and alliances which resulted in conflictual relations between the executive and the legislative and even among the dualist executive itself, it should come as no surprise that the periods of divided government are marked by strong confrontations which have culminated with two failed suspension attempts. The main form of divided government in Romania is that of cohabitation, and it has been experienced only twice, for a brief period of time: in 2007-2008 under Prime-Minister Călin Popescu Tăriceanu of the National Liberal Party and again, starting May 2012, under Prime Minister Victor Ponta of the Social Democratic Party.
    [Show full text]
  • REFERENDUM in ROMANIA 29Th July 2012
    REFERENDUM IN ROMANIA 29th July 2012 European Elections monitor Romanian President Traian Basescu avoids impeachment once again Corinne Deloy Five years after 17th April 2007, when the first referendum on his impeachment as head of State took place, Traian Basescu, President of the Republic of Romania again emerged victorious in the Results battle that opposed him, this time round, against Prime Minister Victor Ponta (Social Democratic Party, PSD). A majority of Romanians who were called to vote for or against the impeachment of the Head of Sate indeed stayed away from the ballot boxes on 29th July. Only 46.13% of them turned out to vote whilst turn out of at least half of those registered was necessary for the consultation to be deemed valid. The government made an attempt to abolish this threshold that has been part of the electoral law since 2010, before being reprimanded by the European Commission and other Western leaderships. Victor Ponta did do everything he could however to achieve the minimum turnout threshold by leaving the polling stations open for four hours more than is the custom (7am to 11pm) and by opening fifty other stations in hotels and restaurants on the shores of the Black Sea where some Romanians spend their holidays. “The Romanians have rejected the coup d’Etat “Whatever the final turnout is no politician can deny launched by the 256 MPs and led by Prime Minister the will of millions of voters without cutting himself Victor Ponta and interim President Crin Antonescu. The off from reality,” declared Prime Minister Ponta.
    [Show full text]
  • Fiul Primarului, Acuzat De Un Localnic Că L-A Lovit Intenţionat Cu Maşina
    C M Y K CuvântulCuvântulWWWCuvântul.CVLPRESS.RO / [email protected] Libert[\iiLibert[\iiLibert[\ii Primul cotidian al Anul XXIII, Nr. 6866 marţi, 5 iunie 2012 16 pagini 0,80 lei Olteniei UNPR Craiova dezaprobă Campanie “cu scântei”, la Castranova: mitingul USL administraţie / 3 Primarul de la Fiul primarului, acuzat de un Apele Vii a fost informator localnic că l-a lovit intenţionat al Securităţii actualitate / 6 cu maşina Preşedintele PSD Dolj, Ion Prioteasa, adresează cele mai since- Un bărbat de 65 de ani, re mulţumiri membrilor şi simpatizanţilor Organizaţiei Municipa- din comuna Castranova, îl le PSD Craiova, precum şi tuturor membrilor organizaţiilor PSD acuză pe fiul primarului din teritoriu pentru implicarea deosebită pe care au avut-o în buna din localitate că l-a lovit desfăşurare a evenimentului prilejuit de vizita la Craiova a pre- mierului Victor Ponta şi de lansarea candidatului la Primăria Mu- intenţionat cu maşina, în nicipiului Craiova, doamna Lia Olguţa Vasilescu. cursul zilei de duminică, deoarece nu-i împărtăşeş- te convingerile politice. De cealaltă parte, prima- rul neagă evenimentul, spune că nici el, nici fiul său n-au avut nimic de îm- părţit cu bărbatul respec- tiv şi că totul este o însce- nare pentru a-l de- nigra. Poliţiştii au deschis o anchetă şi încearcă să afle ce s-a întâmplat EVENIMENT exact acolo. pagina 7 C M Y K 2 / cuvântul libertãþii actualitate marþi, 5 iunie 2012 VALUTA METEO Cursul pieþei valutare din 5 iunie 2012-anunþat de BNR 1 EURO ...........................4,4648 ............
    [Show full text]
  • Corruption and Anticorruption in Romania. Finally Turning the Corner?
    6/7/2017 Corruption and anti­corruption in Romania. Finally turning the corner? | LSEE Blog Apr 14 2015 Corruption and anti­corruption in Romania. Finally turning the corner? Blog Admin A recent anti­corruption spree, led by public prosecutor Laura Kövesi, has taken Romanian political elite by ‘earthquake’. Daniel Brett discusses the multifaceted roots of the country’s corrupt practices: “If there is a historical legacy, it comes from the Communist period”, he argues, “and the absence of a political rupture in 1989 meant that its networks remained unbroken”. Nevertheless, today’s indicted politicians were just teenagers when Communism ended. Is history really to blame? Anti­Ponta and Sova protestors. ‘We’re not hesitating we want justice’. A play on Şovăi hesitate and Sova. Photo: In a country where actions of an ignominious nature are even encouraged, and those of rapacity looked upon as mere proofs of dexterity and cunning, corruption of principles cannot fail to become universal. William Wilkinson, An Account of the Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia, London 1820 The on­going conflict between the Romanian public and the political elite over corruption has recently been given new impetus. Parliament’s refusal to lift the immunity of PSD Senator Dan Sova brought protesters onto the streets, demanding his arrest and the removal of the government. In a week in which gold and Picassos and a Renoir painting were found in the finance minister’s safe following his arrest by the National Anticorruption Unit, Direcţia Naţională Anticorupţie (DNA), alongside continuing investigations of a number of high ranking politicians, corruption remains firmly on the political agenda in Romania.
    [Show full text]
  • EUI RSCAS Working Paper 2021
    RSC 2021/44 Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Integrating Diversity in the European Union (InDivEU) The Politics of Differentiated Integration: What do Governments Want? Country Report - Romania Claudia Badulescu European University Institute Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Integrating Diversity in the European Union (InDivEU) The Politics of Differentiated Integration: What do Governments Want? Country Report - Romania Claudia Badulescu EUI Working Paper RSC 2021/44 Terms of access and reuse for this work are governed by the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC- BY 4.0) International license. If cited or quoted, reference should be made to the full name of the author(s), editor(s), the title, the working paper series and number, the year and the publisher. ISSN 1028-3625 © Claudia Badulescu2021 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY 4.0) International license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Published in March 2021 by the European University Institute. Badia Fiesolana, via dei Roccettini 9 I – 50014 San Domenico di Fiesole (FI) Italy Views expressed in this publication reflect the opinion of individual author(s) and not those of the European University Institute. This publication is available in Open Access in Cadmus, the EUI Research Repository: https://cadmus.eui.eu Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies The Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, created in 1992 and currently directed by Professor Brigid Laffan, aims to develop inter-disciplinary and comparative research on the major issues facing the process of European integration, European societies and Europe’s place in 21 st century global politics.
    [Show full text]
  • Blog: What to Expect from Sunday's Legislative Elections in Romania
    LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) Blog: What to expect from Sunday’s legislative elections in Romania Page 1 of 3 What to expect from Sunday’s legislative elections in Romania Romania will hold legislative elections on 6 December. Sergiu Gherghina previews the vote, writing that while the ruling National Liberal Party is likely to stay in power, the elections will represent a number of firsts for the country. Romanians will go to the polls this Sunday, the fourth time they have been called to vote in an election in a little over 18 months. This time, it will be legislative elections on the ballot, following presidential and European elections in 2019, and local elections earlier this year. The previous three elections demonstrated a consistent pattern that is unlikely to change in the forthcoming legislative elections. The ruling National Liberal Party (PNL), which currently holds power in a minority government, will continue their term in office, but with the possibility of strengthening their position. Three novelties for Romanian politics The 6 December elections will nevertheless bring several novelties to the Romanian political arena. It will be the first time in more than two decades that the Social Democratic Party (PSD) will not be in pole position to win the popular vote. This is underlined by the fact the PNL secured the largest vote share at last year’s European elections, won the 2019 presidential election, and defeated the PSD in the 2020 local elections. Although the social democrats placed second in all three of these contests, the party is facing a battle to maintain this position in the face of strong competition from a recently formed electoral alliance between the Save Romania Union (USR) and the Freedom, Unity and Solidarity Party (PLUS).
    [Show full text]
  • Internal Party Struggles Will Form the Backdrop to Romania's Presidential
    Internal party struggles will form the backdrop to Romania’s presidential election in November blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2014/09/16/internal-party-struggles-will-form-the-backdrop-to-romanias-presidential- election-in-november/ 16/09/2014 Romania will hold presidential elections in November, with the country’s centre-left Prime Minister, Victor Ponta, currently ahead in the polls. Roxana Mihaila writes that the main dynamic in the campaign so far has been an intra-party struggle on the centre-right over the candidate chosen to run against Ponta, with Romania’s incumbent President Traian Basescu unable to stand for a third term. The Romanian Presidential election, scheduled in two rounds for 2 and 16 November 2014 respectively, promises to be a race to the bottom. The contest will take place in a political climate laced with corruption scandals and high-profile convictions, early allegations of potential electoral fraud and a very fragmented party system. As was the case in the 2009 election round, the position has again attracted a considerable number of candidates, with the Social Democratic Party currently in government seemingly in the lead and the two largest parties on the right – the National Liberal Party and the Democratic Liberal Party – in close contest. The electoral scene is quite populated, with potential candidates from smaller parties – the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania , extreme right Greater Romania Party, Green Party and the People’s Party – Dan Diaconescu – also in the running. The scene for the November contest had already been set earlier in May, with the EP elections played out as a trial run for the presidential ones, focused on the ‘presidential’ party members rather than the actual MEP candidates.
    [Show full text]
  • Romanian Politics in 2012 Has Been Marked by a Rocky Cohabitation Between Victor Ponta’S Government and President Traian Basescu
    blo gs.lse.ac.uk http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2012/12/26/2012-in-romanian-politics/ Romanian politics in 2012 has been marked by a rocky cohabitation between Victor Ponta’s government and President Traian Basescu. by Blog Admin In Romania, this year has seen the resignation of one government, a vote of no-confidence in another, an attempt to change the electoral system and efforts by the government to impeach the sitting President. Cristina Bucur looks over political developments in Romania during 2012, finding that they have been characterised by constitutional infighting and an often difficult political cohabitation between the recently re-elected government and the President. It has been a busy year f or Romanian politicians in 2012. The coalition government between the Democrat Liberal Party (PDL) and the Hungarian minority party (UDMR) that had been in power since December 2008 resigned in early February, f ollowing several weeks of street protests that had been triggered by but were not exclusively directed against austerity cuts. Emil Boc, the PDL leader, was succeeded as prime minister by Mihai Razvan Ungureanu, the Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service since 2007 and a f ormer minister of f oreign af f airs. Despite the prime minister’s independent status, the Ungureanu government was in f act a continuation of the PDL-UDMR coalition and enjoyed President Traian Basescu’s support. Two months later though, the government lost a vote of no- conf idence and was replaced by a coalition made up of the Social-Democrat Party (PSD) and the Liberal Party (PNL).
    [Show full text]
  • Liberal Forces Are Expected to Win the Parliamentary Elections in Romania
    GENERAL ELECTIONS IN ROMANIA 6TH DECEMBER 2020 European Liberal forces are expected to Elections monitor win the parliamentary elections Corinne Deloy in Romania on 6 December next ANALYSIS On 3 September last, the Romanian authorities take third place with 20.4% of the vote. Far behind, the announced that the next parliamentary elections would People's Movement Party (PMP) is due to win 6%; the be held on 6 December this year. 18,981,242 people Union Pro Romania-Alliance of Liberals and Democrats, are being called to ballot and 39,238 Romanians living 5.2% and, finally, the Democratic Union of Hungarians abroad (the United Kingdom is the country with the in Romania (UDMR), 4.2%. largest number of voters, followed by Germany, Italy, Spain and France) are expected to fulfil their civic The Social Democratic Party won 1,438 town halls (but only duty. The number of candidates in these parliamentary two large cities, Craiova and Galati) and 20 regional councils elections totals 7,136 (there were 6,476 in the elections in the local elections of 27 September; the National Liberal on 11 December 2016). Party (PNL) won 1,237 (including Constanza, a social democratic stronghold, and Iasi) (-8) and 17 regions The Social Democratic Party (PSD), the main opposition (+8). party, has fought hard in recent weeks to obtain a However, this result did not constitute a victory for postponement of these elections, arguing that the health Marcel Ciolacu's PSD, which controlled half of the situation in Romania, like all European countries, has municipal and regional councils before the elections.
    [Show full text]