Tag: right-wing

  • New leaders for USR party

    New leaders for USR party

    The
    merger between Save Romania Union and Freedom, Unity and Solidarity Party (PLUS)
    concluded with the congress held this weekend. The third-largest party in
    Parliament will be known from now on, more simply, as USR.


    Dacian
    Cioloş, former EU commissioner for agriculture and Romania’s PM after the 2015 Colectiv
    tragedy, will be the party’s president until 2023, when the current leading
    team is to be assessed and the strategy for the 2024 legislative and
    presidential elections put together.


    High-profile
    politicians are also among the party’s new vice-presidents: former leader Dan
    Barna, who lost the election for party president by a small margin, Vlad
    Voiculescu, Cătălin Drulă and Claudiu Năsui, all of them members of the
    coalition government until the recent clash with Florin Cîţu’s Liberals.


    Dacian
    Cioloş has the ambitious goal of making USR Romania’s top right-of-centre party:


    Dacian Cioloş: Our
    goal is to be prepared in 2024 to become the country’s leading right-wing party.
    This means we have to grow as a party, to strengthen our public voice and to
    increase our membership.


    The
    former party leader Dan Barna lost to Cioloş, but his team is the one that has
    a majority in the party’s National Bureau. He insisted on the need for unity:


    Dan Barna: We
    are a team that will move on together and will make USR Plus a strong party, a
    party that will matter in any kind of negotiations in the coming months and
    years.


    A party
    created on the foundations of an NGO joined by civil activists, young employees
    in multinational corporations and businesspeople, USR has aimed from the very
    beginning to be different from traditional parties like the Social Democrats
    and the Liberals. However, ideological affinities with the Liberal Party gave
    rise to the coalition formed shortly after last year’s parliamentary election,
    a coalition also joined by the Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania.


    After
    the justice minister Stelian Ion, a USR member, was dismissed, his party colleagues
    left the cabinet and tabled a no-confidence motion to dismiss PM Cîţu, blamed
    for causing the coalition to break up.


    USR
    say they will return to the government provided that the Liberals appoint
    another prime minister. But the negotiations between the two parties depend
    entirely on whether Florin Cîţu’s minority government survives the
    no-confidence motion, due for vote on Tuesday.


    According
    to commentators, USR would benefit from staying in opposition until the
    elections of 2024. But since the former NGO has already had a taste of power
    and some experience in governing, the Liberals may find it easier to convince
    them to return as partners in a ruling coalition. (tr. A.M. Popescu)