Tag: Save Romania – PLUS Alliance

  • September 26 – October 2 , 2020

    September 26 – October 2 , 2020

    Local elections in the time of pandemic


    46% of the Romanians with the right to vote went to the polls
    last Sunday to elect their local authorities. Although lower than at the previous
    such election, the turnout was good in the complicated context created by the
    pandemic, which imposed unprecedented health safety measures on election
    Sunday. The vote has already brought about changes and heralds a tough
    confrontation at the parliamentary elections due in December. For the first
    time, the governing Liberals won the political vote, practically doubling its
    number of county council presidents and winning the majority of town halls. Moreover,
    the National Liberal Party broke the monopoly of the Social Democrats in counties
    that had been loyal to them for 2 or 3 decades. However, the Social Democratic
    Party, with the largest number of members in parliament, is still the political
    party that holds most mayoralties and the first place with regard to the number
    of county council presidents. The great loss for the party is the one recorded
    in Bucharest, which it had totally controlled for four years. The independent
    Nicusor Dan, supported by the National Liberal Party and the Save Romania -
    PLUS Alliance will be the mayor of the capital, replacing Gabriela Firea.


    The candidates of the center-right alliance created ad-hoc in
    Bucharest also won in three of the 6 sectors of the capital. At the Municipal
    Council, the Social Democratic Party is on the first position, but the Save
    Romania – PLUS Alliance obtained scores that will allow them to decide together
    the administration of a city rich in resources, but poor in vision and
    projects. Through the second place obtained at the political vote on Bucharest
    and the winning of some important municipalities like Timişoara and Braşov, in
    which they dethroned liberal mayors, the Save Romania – PLUS Alliance confirms
    its status as an alternative political force. The victory of a German in
    Timişoara and a French woman in sector 1, the richest in Bucharest, is the proof
    that the Alliance comes with something new in Romanian politics. Unperturbed by
    the pandemic, the electoral process is overshadowed by scandals and cross-fire accusations
    of fraud between the Social Democratic Party and the Save Romania – PLUS Alliance, especially regarding the number
    of votes obtained in Bucharest and sector 1 in particular.



    Daily records of new coronavirus infections


    This week, Romania has for the first time exceeded the threshold
    of 2000 daily infections. Specialists had anticipated that this would be the
    case, especially after the opening of schools. The number of daily infections
    is increasing throughout Europe and there is talk of the imminence of a second
    wave of the pandemic. In Romania, more than 130,000 cases of infection have
    been reported, and the number of dead is approaching 5,000. Some 500 patients
    are constantly in intensive care, but only one third are intubated and need
    ventilation, said the Minister of Health, Nelu Tataru. At national level, the
    incidence of COVID-19 cases is close to one in one thousand inhabitants, but
    the differences are big from one area to another. That is why the
    reintroduction of restrictions or even quarantine must be established according
    to the local situation of the coronavirus epidemic, and not at the level of the
    entire county, said Prime Minister Ludovic Orban. He also called on the
    authorities responsible for daily inspections to ensure compliance with health
    protection measures. The Ministers of the Interior, Transport, Labor and Health
    are called upon to draw up a plan containing clear actions for the
    implementation of these measures



    The EC Report on the rule of law and Bucharest’s response


    The health crisis caused by the pandemic has consumed almost all
    the energy of the political actors in Bucharest. Thus, the commitment to put back
    on track the judiciary, severely affected by the controversial changes to the
    laws of justice and criminal and criminal procedure codes during the last
    left-wing government, seemed forgotten. In its latest report on the rule of law
    in Romania, the European Commission states that the laws of justice, the
    functioning of the National Audiovisual Council, access to public information
    and the excess of emergency ordinances are the main problems. The document
    emphasizes that in 2020, the Government reaffirmed its commitment to correct
    through judicial reforms the measures with negative impact adopted in the
    period 2017-2019, which led to the alleviation of tensions in the judiciary.

    According
    to the evaluation, the controversial measures with a negative impact on judicial
    independence continue to apply, such as the functioning of the Section for the
    Investigation of Crimes in the Judiciary, which deals exclusively with
    prosecuting crimes committed by judges and prosecutors. Further implementation
    of these measures increases uncertainty with regard to the functioning of the justice
    system, especially through the effects they have together, the European
    Commission warns. On the day the report was published in Brussels, in
    Bucharest, the Ministry of Justice launched a public debate on the proposals to
    amend the justice laws. They aim at strengthening the role of the Superior
    Council of Magistracy in organizing and conducting competitions and examinations
    through the National Institute of Magistracy and professionalizing the process
    of selecting magistrates by eliminating any means of entering the judiciary
    without competition. Also, the line ministry decided the elimination of the
    early retirement scheme for magistrates, the strengthening of the principle of prosecutor
    impendence in the judiciary and the dismantling of the Section for the
    Investigation of Crimes in the Judiciary.



    Less
    optimistic economic forecasts


    The European Bank for
    Reconstruction and Development has revised downwards its forecasts regarding
    Romania’s economic evolution in 2020 and 2021, as a result of the crisis
    triggered by the pandemic. According to the latest forecasts, Romania’s economy
    would record a 5% drop this year, as to the 4% estimated in May. For 2021, EBRD
    expects a 3% expansion of Romania’s GDP, against a 4% growth forecast in
    spring. Therefore, after a robust growth of 4.1% in 2019, Romania is facing
    recession in 2020. According to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development,
    the key transmission channels are lower consumption and declining exports. (M. Ignatescu)