Romania's nominated PM fails confidence vote in parliament, political crisis deepens
The rejection leaves President Nicusor Dan to name another prime minister as Romania risks delays to 11 billion euros in EU recovery funds.
- On Monday, Prime Minister-designate Adrian Vestea failed to win parliament's vote of confidence, securing only 189 of the 233 required votes and extending Romania's political crisis.
- Centrist President Nicusor Dan nominated Vestea, a Liberal Party member, to rebuild a pro-European government after the previous coalition collapsed in May, but the Liberals refused to support him.
- The far-right Alliance for Uniting Romanians refused to back Vestea, with leader George Simion demanding mainstream parties stop calling them "extremist," while AUR polls at 38% to 41% and opposes aid for Ukraine.
- President Dan must now nominate a new prime minister within 10 days to assemble a cabinet; political science professor Sergiu Miscoiu said minority governments "have a hard time governing, but either version would be democratically transparent, at least."
- This ongoing crisis threatens Romania's access to European Union funds and credit ratings; under Romanian law, the president can dissolve parliament and trigger early elections if two prime minister-designates fail within 60 days.
33 Articles
33 Articles
Dominic Fritz said that the MPs of the party he leads will not secure votes for a PSD government, although Ilie Bolojan said that PNL will support a minority cabinet on the basis of a clear agreement. Article Dominic Fritz, after the first step out of the PNL tandem: "And the liberals want to govern . . appears first on Romania TV.
President Nicușor Dan had consultations with parliamentary parties on Tuesday, a day after Parliament rejected the Old Government. According to HotNews sources,
Georgescu and Simion Block Globalist, Brussels-Backed Cabinet as Romania’s Sovereignty Revolt Grows * The Gateway Pundit * by Robert Semonsen
Romania’s national-conservative opposition delivered a major blow to the country’s Brussels-aligned establishment after Parliament rejected Prime Min…
The political crisis in the EU and NATO country becomes a hanging party. In fact, pro-European politician Adrian Vestea should lead Romania's future government - but the parliament stands across.
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