Tag: party switching

  • The Week in Review 7-13 December

    The Week in Review 7-13 December

    Romania’s State Budget for 2015


    The Government of Romania has finalised the draft state budget for 2015. It was designed on the basis of a 1.8% budget deficit, a macroeconomic indicator negotiated with the representatives of the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission and the World Bank, which early this week have completed a new assessment mission in Bucharest.



    The Government also relies on a 2.2% inflation rate and a 2.5% economic growth rate. Under next year’s budget, the ministries of labour, finances, agriculture, European funds, transport and economy will have more money than in 2014. Conversely, the budgets of the healthcare, culture, administration and the interior ministry have been lowered. Prime Minister Victor Ponta explains:



    “First of all, there will not be, and the budget bill does not include, any additional taxes or charges in 2015. Obviously the flat 16% tax remains in force. The charge on special construction projects will be lowered from 1.5% to 1% and this has been taken into account in calculating the state budget. It was a fundamental objective. All the current measures targeting economic development or social justice are covered by the draft budget.”



    The 2015 budget also provides for increasing the national minimum wages in two stages. As of January the 1st, minimum wages will be 220 euros, to be further increased to 235 euros on July the 1st. Other social protection measures include a 5% increase of pension benefits and higher allowances for people with disabilities. A priority for next year is to encourage investments. Here is the minister delegate for budget, Darius Valcov:



    “We chose to cut down those budgetary allocations that were excessive and to focus on investments. The budget for investment projects rose from 34 to 44 billion lei, that is by 23%, and the budget law will include a list of investment priorities. As far as the investments are concerned, I don’t believe there is any case of budget reduction.”



    Another goal of the Romanian Government is to reduce the number of the unemployed by 20 thousand, to 465,000 people.



    Romanian MPs reject postal voting bill


    “The Romanian Parliament is a building haunted by Communists whose only care is to punish the Romanian citizens living abroad”. This is how MP Eugen Tomac harshly criticized the vote of the Chamber of Deputies, which on Tuesday rejected an older draft law on the introduction of postal voting for the parliamentary, presidential and European Parliament elections for the Romanians who live or reside abroad. The draft law had been rejected in February by the Senate as well.



    The serious problems reported in the diaspora at the recent presidential election have once again pointed to the need to amend the election law. The two chambers of Romania’s Parliament have jointly decided that by June 30th 2015 a special parliamentary commission is to draft proposals to this end.



    Several Romanians, of the thousands who queued for hours to cast their vote and failed to do so because of the flawed organisation of the voting process abroad this November, have filed criminal complaints. Dealt with by the General Prosecutor’s Office in a first stage, the case has been taken over by the National Anti-Corruption Directorate, which received, on Monday, from the Standing Electoral Authority, the documents it had requested for verification.



    Is party switching unconstitutional?


    Romania’s Constitutional Court will discuss on Wednesday, December 17th, a notification filed by the Liberal and Liberal Democrats MPs, according to which the law approving an emergency government ordinance on local elected officials switching parties comes against the Constitution.



    Endorsed by the Chamber of Deputies, and also by the Senate this week, the law allows local elected officials to move from one party to another without losing their public office. The Opposition criticises the practice of party switching as one of the most damaging in Romanian politics. The leader of the National Liberal Party group in the Senate, Puiu Hasoti:



    “After party switching altered voting majorities at local, county and national level, now this law further encourages it, which is unacceptable”.



    The effects of winter flooding


    Rivers and rivulets in the counties of Olt, Dolj, Teleorman, Mehedinti, Dambovita, Giurgiu and Ilfov have this week been under code red, orange and yellow alerts for flooding. Heavy rainfalls have affected 140 villages in the south of Romania, tens of roads and hundreds of hectares of farming land. Scores of people have been evacuated and landslides have been reported in several areas. The most affected of all counties is Teleorman in the south of Romania, where task forces have been mobilized to help the local authorities.



    All Romanian football teams have been eliminated from the Europa League


    Romania’s football champions Steaua Bucharest and vice-champions Astra from Giurgiu, in the south, ended their Europa League run after being defeated on Thursday. In their last Group J match, Steaua Bucharest lost to Ukraine’s Dinamo Kiev 0-2, and with only 7 points ranked 3rd in the standings. Astra Giurgiu lost 1-5 in an away match to FC Red Bull Salzburg from Austria, and ended on last position with only 4 points.


  • Political party switching

    The government emergency ordinance regulating party switching has been published this week in the Official Journal of Romania. The government, made up of the Social Democratic Party, the National Union for the Progress of Romania, the Conservatives and the Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania, claims this new piece of legislation is intended to streamline the work of local administration offices, paralysed by political reconfigurations since the 2012 elections.



    The Christian Liberal Alliance in opposition argues however that this encourages the already widespread practice of party switching. Threatened to lose many of its local elected officials, the Opposition initiated a motion of censure, challenged the ordinance at the Bucharest Court of Appeal and urged the Ombudsman to take measures against it. Victor Ciorbea, speaking for the Ombudsman, had this to say:



    “The ordinance has finally been published in the Official Journal, so now we have the text, we have the written memo from the Christian Liberal Alliance, and other arguments. We will try to come up with an official position as soon as possible.”



    Observers believe that pragmatic electoral purposes are in fact underlying the move. The Social Democratic Party, which controls the central government, has far less influence in the local administration, which is precisely why it tries to win over mayors from opposition parties. This, analysts argue, would benefit the Romanian Socialists in more than one way. On the one hand, it would strengthen their position in the local administration, and on the other hand it would pave the way for the election of prime minister Victor Ponta, the Social Democratic candidate in this autumn’s presidential ballot.

  • Ordinance on Party Switching

    Ordinance on Party Switching

    The low approval rates reported for the Romanian politicians in all national public confidence surveys are neither surprising, nor ungrounded. Over the past few years, anti-corruption prosecutors have brought to Court politicians of all political affiliations and from all administrative levels, going from mayors and local councilors to MPs and ministers and culminating with the former Social Democratic PM Adrian Nastase.



    The public distrust is fueled not only by politicians breaking or bending the law, but also by their generally low moral standards, reflected in the primacy of personal and party interests over the nation’s well-being, or in shady dealings between private companies and public institutions.



    One of the most heavily criticized practices among politicians is party switching, which is so common in the Romanian Parliament that it helped form or bring down governments. This is precisely why, political analysts say, the Government of Romania, made up of the Social Democratic Party, the National Union for the Progress of Romania, the Conservatives and the Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania, further stained its image when it passed an emergency ordinance that gives local elected officials 45 days to change their party affiliation without losing their offices.



    The Cabinet claims that in many cases the activity of local authorities gets stuck because of the reorganization of parties and of political and electoral alliances.



    The piece of legislation is strongly opposed by the National Liberal Party and the Liberal Democrats, which have recently formed the Christian-Liberal Alliance. They announced a censure motion on this topic, on grounds that the ordinance paves the way for political proselytism attempts. Other observers also share the view that the Social Democratic Party will try to manipulate budget allocations so as to win over as many mayors as possible, who would then support PM Victor Ponta’s presidential candidacy in November.