Tag: Romanian parliament elections

  • November 6-12

    November 6-12

    Romanian reactions to the US presidential election



    Romanian authorities have hailed Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election and have conveyed messages of congratulations. The Romanian President, Klaus Iohannis, underlined Romania’s firm commitment to deepening cooperation with the future American Administration in the field of security and to developing the economic side of the US-Romania Strategic Partnership.



    Klaus Iohannis: We are willing to cooperate in order to strengthen the Strategic Partnership between Romania and the US. In the event of changes, they will be in the sense of consolidating this partnership with focus on its three components: politics, security and economy. I have repeatedly said that although the first two components are functioning extremely well, we still need to boost economic cooperation, and maybe this is an opportunity.



    The PM Dacian Ciolos has talked about the importance of the bilateral Strategic Partnership saying that increased importance should be attached to developing and boosting economic relations.



    Start of election campaign in Romania



    Friday marks the start of the election campaign for the December 11 parliamentary elections in Romania. This year’s elections will unfold according to new legislation. The party-list system will be used again, just as in 2004, and there will be new regulations in terms of representation: 1 deputy for 73 thousand inhabitants and 1 senator for 168 thousand people. 6,493 persons have signed up and are currently running for the 466 MP seats.



    Most candidates are members of the parties with big chances to enter Parliament, namely the Social Democratic Party, the National Liberal Party, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats, the People’s Movement Party, the Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania and the Save Romania Union. There are also independent candidates running. A first for this winter’s elections is postal voting for the Romanian citizens who have their residence or domicile outside Romania. Ion Barbu, a director with the Romanian Post National Company, says a first envelope has already arrived from abroad.



    Ion Barbu: I can confirm that a voter from Austria has already returned by post the ballot papers received. The Electoral Bureau will keep safe and store the papers until December 11, the date of elections, when they will be opened and counted.



    NATO ministerial meeting in Bucharest



    The Foreign Ministers of nine NATO members from Central and Eastern Europe (Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania) have this week met in Bucharest. Launched last year upon the initiative of Romania and Poland, the talks held in this format represent a platform for cooperation on issues specific to the region and on the initiatives which the participating countries want to promote within the Alliance. NATO’s Deputy Secretary General Rose Gottemoeller also attended the meeting in Bucharest.



    At a joint press conference, the Romanian Foreign Minister Lazăr Comănescu said:


    We have made similar assessments of the special importance that is to be attached to consolidating the presence of the Alliance in our region. We need to pay increased attention to the southern component of NATO’s eastern flank, given that the biggest challenges in terms of security come from that area.



    Romania supports Serbia’s EU accession



    Romania has reiterated its support for Serbia’s accession to the European Union on the occasion of the meeting, in the western Romanian city of Timisoara, between the PM Dacian Cioloş and his Serbian counterpart Aleksandar Vučić.



    Dacian Cioloş: It is also in our interest to have an all-European Serbia in the Western Balkans. We have signed an agreement and have assured the Serbian prime minister that he will have Romania’s full support for the reforms Serbia intends to carry out in order to prepare its EU accession.



    The two prime ministers have tackled issues related to the consolidation of cooperation including in the fields of labor force, economy and minorities. Several agreements have been signed among which a Protocol on the setting up of common patrols along the border between the two states and its activities, and another Protocol on preventing and responding to disasters. Also progress has been reported with regard to the common project of building a highway linking Belgrade to Timişoara.



    The laser facility in Măgurele introduced to businesspeople and civil society



    Early this week, researchers with the National Institute for Physics and Nuclear Engineering in Măgurele presented to businesspeople and civil society the domains in which the high-power laser facility will be used. The government’s representative responsible for the project , Adrian Curaj, has conveyed a message of the PM, which highlights the project’s capacity to generate development and economic growth.



    Adrian Curaj: Măgurele is a unique scientific and technological project. It has an extraordinary force to generate development. It is not a project of the region, it is rather a project of Romania because Romania is willing to and can achieve many things. The results obtained at the laser facility in Măgurele will have a strong impact on the Romanian economy in the sense of creating jobs and welfare. I am confident that the scope of this project will make it a priority for each government. Of course, each government can relate to it in its own way, but the importance and scale of the project cannot be ignored.



    The facility in Magurele, which aims to host the highest-intensity laser system in the world, is to become operational by 2019.




  • November 12, 2016

    November 12, 2016

    ELECTION CAMPAIGN
    The campaign for the December 11th parliamentary elections in
    Romania started on Friday. Some 6,500 people, both party members and
    independent candidates, have registered for the race to get one of the 466
    seats in the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. The system used this year is
    the party-list proportional representation system, used back in 2004. The
    parties standing the biggest changes of being represented in the next
    Parliament are the Social Democratic Party, the National Liberal Party, the Save
    Romania Union, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats and the People’s Movement
    Party.








    MOLDOVA Sunday will see the
    second ballot of the presidential elections in the neighboring Republic of
    Moldova, the former Soviet country with a predominantly Romanian-speaking
    population. Competing are the pro-Russia socialist Igor Dodon and the pro-West
    reformist Maia Sandu. Some 3 million citizens are thus expected to the polls to
    elect their president, for the first time after 16 years in which the president
    was designated by Parliament. Pundits say that the stake of the ballot is not
    just political, but also geo-political. Dodon wants his country to join the
    Russia-Belarus-Kazakhstan Union, while Sandu stands for reform and European
    integration.








    PROTESTS Demonstrations have
    been held for three nights in a row in big cities and university campuses in
    the US against the president – elect Donald Trump. Protesters say that,
    although they know they cannot change the result of the election, they want to
    draw attention to the fact that there are many reasons for people to be unhappy
    with the future president, whose campaign included lots of insulting remarks
    against women, as well as threats such as the one about building a wall between
    the US and Mexico to keep immigrants away. Initially, Trump said that
    protesters were professional rioters, incited by the media. Later he
    reconsidered his position, saying the protesters were people who loved their
    country and made an appeal to unity.






    TALIBAN ATTACK NATO has
    announced that Bagram, the largest American base in Afghanistan, near capital
    Kabul, has been hit by an explosion, which killed 4 people. The attack has been
    claimed by Taliban insurgents. The Bagram base is a regular target for the
    Taliban. Six American soldiers were killed in December last year, when a
    Taliban riding a motorcycle blew himself up near the base. That was one of the
    bloodiest attacks against the foreign troops in Afghanistan in 2015.






    FOOTBALL
    On Friday night in Bucharest, Romania’s
    national football team lost the match against Poland 0-3. The national squad
    now stands less chances of qualifying for the 2018 World Cup hosted by Russia.
    With only 5 points, Romania ranks 4th in the preliminary group E,
    after Poland with 10 points, Montenegro with 7 points and Denmark with 6. In
    the same group, also on Friday, Armenia defeated Montenegro 3-2, and Denmark
    beat Kazakhstan 4-1. On Tuesday, the Romanian national squad will take on the
    Russian team in a friendly game hosted by Grozny. The next official game of the
    Romanian national football team is scheduled for March, on home turf, against
    Denmark.








    RUGBY Romania’s national
    rugby team is today playing in Bucharest against the US squad a test-match at
    the end of which the winner will get the Pershing Cup. The trophy has been
    awarded by the Romanian rugby Federation since 2014, in memory of the game held
    at the Inter-Allied Military Olympics organized in 1919 by the Commander of the
    American Expeditionary Force, General John Joseph Pershing, to mark the end of
    the first world war. Seven of the eight games held so far have been won by the
    US.