Tag: outgoing

  • Romania has a new PM designate

    Romania has a new PM designate

    After consultations with the political parties in Parliament, the President of Romania Klaus Iohannis designated the head of the National Liberal Party, Ludovic Orban, to put together a new Cabinet and a governing programme, and submit them for approval by Parliament. According to the head of state, the National Liberal Party is the largest opposition party and the initiator of the no-confidence motion which last week brought down Viorica Dancilas Social Democratic Government. The Social Democratic Party had been left with a minority government after their junior partners in the ruling coalition, ALDE, had switched to the opposition in August.



    According to Klaus Iohannis, the new Liberal Government will be in charge, among other things, with the appropriate organisation of next months presidential election, with closing the 2019 state budget and preparing the 2020 budget.



    Klaus Iohannis: “The National Liberal Party was the only party that said, in the consultations, that although it is a difficult job, they are ready to take over power in this transition period, because we are talking about a transition time. The Government that will be sworn in at some point in the forthcoming weeks will have a short term, until the parliamentary elections.



    The PM designate Ludovic Orban, who has 10 days to present Parliament with his governing team and programme, promised that the new ministers will be honest and competent, and will have solutions for Romanias major problems. He added the priorities will include rebuilding macroeconomic balances, a large-scale restructuring of the governmental scheme, a focus on investments in the transport infrastructure, healthcare and education, true independence of the judiciary and strengthening Romanias position within the EU.



    For the time being, the only hurdle for a new governmental team is to secure the 233 votes required for its endorsement by Parliament.



    Ludovic Orban: “I trust all the partners who joined us in our effort to put an end to the Social Democratic government, and I am confident that in all the talks we will have from now on we will find the necessary insight, openness and interest in serving the citizens, because every day without a new government means that the Social Democratic Party and the Dancila Cabinet are still in power, in spite of having been dismissed through a motion of censure, of having no legitimacy and of virtually no Romanian willing to see them in power.



    So far, the Liberals can only count on their own Senators and Deputies, and on the ones representing the ethnic minorities. Most of the other parties that helped dismiss the Dancila Cabinet have their own terms and conditions or are waiting to see what the new Cabinet proposes. As for the Social Democratic Party, they said they would not endorse a Liberal government as long as it lacks an action plan. The outgoing PM Viorica Dancila, encouraged on Tuesday by the new IMF forecasts regarding Romanias economic growth during her term in office, announced:



    Viorica Dancila: “As president of the Social Democratic Party, and following talks with the leaders of the partys county organisations, I have decided that we will not take part in the vote on the new government.



    In other words, if they managed to bring down the Dancila Government, the Liberals and the parties that supported them must now prove they are able to replace it.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • November 16, 2016

    November 16, 2016

    HEARING – The president of the Permanent Electoral Authority of Romania, Ana Maria Pătru, is to be heard by judges today, after the National Anti-Corruption Directorate requested her arrest pending trial. She was detained last night under charges of influence peddling and money laundering. Pǎtru allegedly demanded and received over 200,000 euros in bribe in exchange for implementing IT procurement contracts with a particular company, and tried to conceal the source of the money by setting up a fictitious circuit. Ana Maria Pătru announced her resignation as head of the Permanent Electoral Authority.




    CORRUPTION – The ex-MEP Adrian Severin is to find out today whether he must serve a harsher sentence instead of the three and a half year imprisonment ruling initially passed against him. Anti-corruption prosecutors requested penalties of 6 and a half years for bribe taking and 5 years for influence peddling. Adrian Severin is accused of having accepted the 100,000 euros per year promised by two journalists from The Sunday Times, who were running an undercover investigation, in exchange for submitting amendments in the specialised committees of the European Parliament. Two other MEPs, from Slovenia and Austria, also accepted to sell their services to The Sunday Times journalists. Unlike Adrian Severin, they resigned following this corruption scandal.




    ECONOMY – In Romania, the hard-won macroeconomic balance must be preserved, the governor of the National Bank of Romania Mugur Isărescu warned once again. The central bank official says that in spite of Romanias economic growth, encouraging demand and consumption has created jobs in other countries rather than in Romania, given that the demand has been primarily met by imports, which are going up at a much faster rate than exports. Financial-banking analysts estimate that Romania needs a 5% annual growth rate for a long period if it is to recover its development delays compared to Western Europe.




    BOOK FAIR – Bucharest is hosting until Sunday the 23rd Gaudeamus International Book and Education Fair, the longest-lived and most dynamic book fair in Romania, organised by Radio Romania. The highlights of this years fair include events devoted to the Romanian film industry, attended by the directors Cristian Mungiu and Radu Jude, and some of the most recent international releases launched in their Romanian version. This years guest of honour is China. During its 96 editions in various Romanian cities in 20 years of existence, the fair has brought together more than 2,600,000 visitors and some 10,500 special events.




    US PRESIDENT – The US President Barack Obama will give a speech in Athens today on his views on democracy. Yesterday, during a meeting with his Greek counterpart, Prokopis Pavlopoulos, Obama pleaded for a strong, united and thriving Europe. Greece is the first destination in the last foreign trip made by Obama as President of the USA. In Europe, Obama will have meetings with the German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the President of France, Francois Hollande and the Prime Ministers of UK and Italy. He will then travel to Peru, to attend the Asia-Pacific Cooperation Summit. The outgoing White House leader intends to reassure his European allies of the future of the trans-Atlantic relations, amid concerns triggered by the intentions of his successor, Donald Trump.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)