Tag: elections in the UK

  • July 5, 2024 UPDATE

    July 5, 2024 UPDATE

    ELECTIONS – Ruling coalition parties PSD and PNL decided that the first round of the presidential election will take place on November 24, with the second round slated for December 8. In addition, coalition leaders decided that the parliamentary election will take place, for the first time, on December 1, the National Day of Romania. The government decision regarding the election timetable was adopted during Thursday’s government session. This week, opposition parties took part in consultations launched by Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu. The presidential election was supposed to take place on September 15, following an original agreement reached by PSD and PNL, but the Liberals later disagreed with this date. So far, the two parties have not announced their presidential candidates.

     

     

    CENTRAL BANK – The Board of Directors of the National Bank of Romania on Friday decided to reduce the monetary policy interest rate from 7% to 6.75% per year starting July 8. At the same time, the Central Bank decided to lower the interest rate for Lombard loans from 8.00% to 7.75% per year, as well as the interest rate for deposits from 6.00% to 5.75% per year. The Bank decided to maintain the mandatory minimum reserve rates for liabilities in national and foreign currencies of credit institutions at the current levels. The monetary policy rate was unchanged since January last year, when the Bank increased the interest rate from 6.75% to 7% per year. According to the Central Bank, the annual inflation rate accelerated its decline in the first two months of the second quarter of 2024, dropping to 5.12% in May, below the forecast level.

     

     

    TRILATERAL – On the sidelines of the Romania – Republic of Moldova – Ukraine Trilateral meeting in Chișinău, the foreign ministers of the three states signed a joint resolution presenting their common vision with respect to the current security context. The meeting represented a new opportunity of expressing support for Ukraine, for its independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, in the context of the war of aggression waged by the Russian Federation, the Romanian Foreign Minister, Luminiţa Odobescu said. The common goal remains to ensure international support for comprehensive, just and sustainable peace, the Moldovan Foreign Minister said in turn. In addition, the three officials also signed a memorandum on combating disinformation and foreign interference.

     

     

    SCHENGEN – Hungary, the country that currently holds the presidency of the Council of the European Union, claims that it does not understand Austria’s continuous opposition to the Schengen accession of Romania and Bulgaria. Since the two countries have fulfilled all requirements and tests in recent years, Hungary will call on the Council to greenlight their Schengen accession this year, the Hungarian Interior Minister told a press briefing attended by journalists from all over Europe. The Budapest official also said that, over the course of his mandate, Hungary will advocate its own vision on border defense as the key solution to the issue of illegal migration.

     

     

    ELECTIONS IN THE UK – Labor Party leader Keir Starmer is the new Prime Minister of Great Britain. He was formally appointed to form a new government by King Charles III on Friday, following his party’s landslide victory in Thursday’s parliamentary election. A former human rights solicitor, Starmer entered politics only nine years ago. He thus becomes the third prime minister in less than two years of Charles’ reign, after Conservative leaders Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak. Keir Starmer will lead the country after 14 years of Conservative rule and a number of crises, including austerity measures, Brexit, the pandemic, rampant price hikes and successive government changes. Prime Minister Starmer seeks to re-launch economic growth, restore public services, strengthen employee rights, reduce immigration and bring Britain closer to the European Union, without however referring to Brexit, a topic he refrained from approaching in the election campaign. The Labor Party grabbed 412 mandates, well above the threshold of 326 that ensures the absolute majority needed to form a government. With only 121 mandates compared to the 365 secured five years ago, the Conservative Party recorded its worst election score since the start of 20th century. (VP)

  • The status of British citizens in Romania

    The status of British citizens in Romania

    The Liberal
    Government in Bucharest on Wednesday passed an emergency decree on the status
    of British citizens living in Romania in the case Great Britain leaves the
    EU without an agreement. The decree also defends the interests of Romanian
    citizens living in the UK. Here is the head of the Prime Minister’s
    Chancellery, Ionel Danca:


    Right now, Romania is the only EU Member
    State that has not implemented such regulations, and the unpredictable developments
    in Great Britain compel the urgent adoption of a framework agreement in order
    to avoid the situation where Great Britain leaves the EU without an agreement
    and British citizens in Romania lack the legal conditions allowing them for a
    transit period pending the definition of their rights and obligations in
    Romania, as well as the rights and obligations of Romanian citizens in Great
    Britain.


    Although it hasn’t
    taken effect yet, Brexit has struck fear into the hearts of all EU citizens,
    especially those studying or working in the UK. They have to demand in advance
    the right to remain in this country, or else they risk being pushed out of the
    country. The British Interior Ministry in London has recently announced some
    1.8 million people filed requests to obtain stay permits, with many others
    willing to risk staying without legal documentation. Still, the BBC claims that
    any person presenting reasonable evidence for their lack of a visa will be
    allowed an extension, allowing them to file for British stay and work permits.

    The British Interior Ministry does not have the exact figure of EU citizens currently
    residing in the UK, but the Migration Observatory puts to figure at close to
    3.3 million people, including Romanians. The greatest concern is linked,
    however, to the exact date of Brexit, which has been postponed three times
    already in three and a half years. The latest delay occurred at the end of last
    month, with the new expected deadline set for January 31, 2020. Even so,
    uncertainty continues to grip the country. Great Britain will see early parliamentary
    elections next month, on which the very fate of Brexit seems to depend.
    Conservative Prime Minister Boris Johnson claims he is the only one who can see
    Brexit achieved on January 31, while his opponent, the leader of Labour
    opposition, Jeremy Corbyn, argues he is capable of securing a better deal with
    Brussels, one he is willing to subject to a referendum that would also include
    a question on Great Britain’s possible stay in the EU.

    (translated by V. Palcu)