Tag: February 24

  • Political uncertainty in Bucharest

    Political uncertainty in Bucharest

    Last year, the Romanian Social Democrats surprisingly lost the EP elections, the governing and the presidential election. Also in 2019, the PSD strongman Liviu Dragnea was imprisoned for corruption leaving the party without a leader. After these unexpected blows, few would have imagined that the main leftist party in Romania would continue to call the tune or at least to spoil their political adversaries’ game.



    The Social Democrats still have a say in political procedures as they have held a relative majority in Parliament since 2016, the year of the latest elections. And this very majority forced the first minority Liberal government headed by Ludovic Orban to avoid parliamentary debate on some of its bills, and to eventually resort to the procedure of assuming responsibility for those respective bills. The government assumed responsibility also for the bill on reintroducing the election of mayors in two rounds, a move that proved fatal.



    Worried that the new voting system might influence negatively their results at the summer local elections, the Social Democratic Party joined forces to gather all the political groups which were opposed to the bill, and dismissed the first Orban government through a motion of no confidence. Now, they are playing the majority card again to thwart the Liberals’ plans to hold early elections. The Social Democrats are set to boycott the government meeting of Monday, February 24, when the second Orban government has to receive the investiture vote.



    According to the Social Democratic interim leader Marcel Ciolacu, they want to expect the decision of the Constitutional Court which is going to examine, also on Monday, the possible legal conflict between Parliament and the Presidential Administration regarding the designation of Ludovic Orban to the position of PM for a second time. The Social Democrats believe that the president defied the MPs by designating a prime minister that had just been dismissed by Parliament.



    However, constitutional law experts claim that the PSD notification of the Court is ungrounded and that the president has the right to designate whomever he wants, in the absence of a party that holds an absolute majority, according to a previous ruling of the Constitutional Court. Observers are convinced that the move is another subterfuge of the Social Democrats who are doing their best to avoid observing the period of two months in which two governments should be dismissed for Parliament to be dissolved and early elections to be called.



    If quorum is not achieved on Monday, the investiture vote will be postponed and thus the procedure for early elections delayed. The PSD will equally vote against the emergency decree regulating legislative elections, which brings important modifications to the vote in the Diaspora, from the voting period of 3 days to the doubling of the number of the Diaspora’s representatives in Parliament.



    Cautious and attentive to the reaction of the Romanians from abroad, Marcel Ciolacu announced that all the measures targeting the Diaspora would be included in a bill initiated by his own party. Meanwhile, the Liberals are reiterating their will to call early elections, which they consider the only way to overcome the current political deadlock, since they would allow the creation of a solid center-rightist majority. The Save Romania Union is in favor of early elections, but the rest of the parliamentary parties are opposed to them, because they risk not being included in the future parliament. (translation by L. Simion)

  • The Republic of Moldova ahead of parliamentary elections

    The Republic of Moldova ahead of parliamentary elections

    Four years since the latest round of
    legislative elections held in late 2014, the Moldovan Parliament will have a
    new membership. The elections of February 24 will be based, for the first time,
    on the mixed voting system, with 50 MPs elected on party lists and 51 others
    elected in their constituencies, by means of uninominal voting, in only one
    round. Simultaneously with the elections, a referendum will be held on downsizing
    the number of MPs from 101 to 61 and introducing the possibility of citizens
    removing them.

    Just like before in Moldova (set up on part of the Romanian
    eastern territories annexed by the former Soviet Union in 1940, following an
    ultimatum) the ballot will express not only a political but also a
    geo-political choice. Opinion polls on voting intention show that only four
    political parties stand chances of being represented in the new Moldovan
    Parliament. The pro-Russian Socialists of president Dodon are the favourites,
    with some 40% of the voting intentions, followed by the ACUM bloc, an electoral
    cartel of the pro-European right wing, with some 25% and the West-leaning
    left-of-centre Democratic Party, the senior party in the ruling coalition, with
    15%.

    Consequently, the Republic of Moldova is again at a critical moment in its
    development, and internal and external forces are trying to destabilise and
    divide society, the US ambassador to Chisinau, Derek J. Hogan, has overtly
    warned. Just like Bucharest and Brussels, Washington deems the parliamentary
    elections as a crucial test. The American diplomat has also said the United
    States calls on the authorities at all levels, to ensure a free, fair and
    transparent electoral process, for all the candidates to have the chance to participate
    in this process on an equal footing, without fearing harassment or
    intimidation.

    The Speaker of the Moldovan Parliament, Andrian Candu (a member
    of the Democratic Party), has expressed confidence that the Republic of Moldova
    will have a pro-western government after the elections too, even if the ballot is
    to be won by the Socialists, because they will not have the necessary number of
    votes to form a majority. He has added that Chisinau’s European commitment is
    so strong that it is ready to relinquish the reintegration of the pro-Russian
    region of Transdniester (in the east), which actually took out from under the
    central authorities’ control as early as 1992, following an armed conflict
    which left hundreds of dead and which was ended by the intervention of Moscow’s
    troops, on the separatists’ side.

    On behalf of neighbouring Romania, the
    Romanian ambassador to Chisinau, Daniel Ioniţă, has also promised that in the
    current semester, when Romania is holding the rotating presidency of the
    Council of the European Union, the neighbouring republic will enjoy a special
    place on this presidency’s agenda.



  • January 25, 2019 UPDATE

    January 25, 2019 UPDATE

    Currency — Romania’s national currency, the LEU, on Friday reached a new historic low as against the EURO, with one Euro being traded for 4 lei and 76 bani. The value was reported after a one-day break on the inter-banking market occasioned by a national holiday. The leu also depreciated against the US dollar which was traded for 4 lei and 20 bani. The Social Democratic Party in the ruling coalition claims the national bank has enough resources, of almost 37 billion Euros, to be able to intervene in favor of the national currency. According to data published on Friday by the central bank the money supply rose by almost 9% in December 2018 as compared to the same month of the previous year.



    Corruption — The National Anti-corruption Directorate prosecutors on Friday asked for a 12-year prison sentence for the former mayor of Constanta, Radu Mazare. This is the maximum sentence in a file in which Mazare is being tried for bribe taking, conflict of interests and abuse of office. The court meeting prosecutor also asked for the confiscation of one million Euros Mazare received as bribe as well as for the coverage of the loss. The trial is being judged in the absence of the former Social Democratic mayor Radu Mazare who left the country and fled to Madagascar where he asked for political asylum in December 2017. The High Court of Cassation and Justice issued an arrest warrant in absentia. Mazare made investments in Madagascar where he built a small resort for water sports on the shore of the Indian Ocean. Mazare was mayor of Constanta, the largest port on the Black Sea Coast, from 2000 to 2015 when he resigned after he was first arrested for corruption.



    Chisinau — Friday saw the start of the campaign for the parliamentary elections in the Republic of Moldova due on February 24. The elections will be held for the first time based on the mixed electoral system according to which 50 deputies will be elected on party lists and another 51 in individual constituencies, in one single round. So far 9 parties have been registered and 6 have submitted their files to the Central Electoral Committee. According to opinion surveys, running as favorites are Igor Dodon’s pro-Russian Socialists followed by a coalition of the pro-European right and by the center-left Democratic Party. A referendum was scheduled to take place at the same time with the elections, in which people are called to vote on whether to reduce the number of deputies from 101 to 61 and on whether the deputies can be revoked by the citizens.



    Flu — The Romanian health minister Sorina Pintea on Friday said that she was expecting Tuesday’s communiqué of the National Public Health Institute before she declared a flu epidemic. If the communiqué shows that for the 3rd consecutive week the number of diagnosed flu cases is higher than the number of estimated cases, then a flu epidemic will be declared. The authorities announced 36 people have been killed by the flu virus this season. Doctors recommend vaccination.



    Handball – Romania’s women’s handball champions CSM Bucharest on Saturday will play away from home against Gyor ETO from Hungary in their first match in the Champions’ League Main Group B. The two teams are on first positions Gyor with 8 points and CSM with 6 points. The group also includes Vipers Kristiansand (Norway), Krim Ljubljana (Slovenia), Ferencvaros (Hungary) and Thuringer HC (Germany). In the past two seasons CSM Bucharest got the bronze medal after in 2016 they won the trophy. This is CSM Bucharest’s 4th consecutive participation in the Champions’ League. Also on Saturday the holder of the EHF Cup, Romania’s vice-champions, SCM Craiova, will play at home against the Croat team Podravka Vegeta Koprivnica in Group D. Podravka is ranked 1st in the classification, with 6 points, being followed by de Super Amara Bera Bera (Spain) and SCM Craiova, each with 2 points. In Group A of the Champions’ League, SC Magura from Cisnadie will take on, away from home, the Norwegian team Storhamar Handball Elite. (translation by L. Simion)