Romanian Prime Minister ousted in no-confidence vote

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Romania Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan

Romanian MPs have voted to remove Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan in a no-confidence vote in parliament.

The largest party, the left-wing Social Democrats, abandoned Bolojan’s four-party coalition last month and joined the far-right opposition to call for the vote.

The Social Democrats have repeatedly clashed with Bolojan, a liberal, over austerity measures aimed at reducing the budget deficit.

President Nicusor Dan, who is now expected to try to rebuild the coalition under a different prime minister, has sought to give reassurances that Romania – an EU and Nato member which borders Ukraine – will retain its pro-Brussels stance.

A total of 281 MPs voted for the no-confidence motion, well above the 233 needed for the measure to pass.

Elections are not due until 2028, and though a snap poll is unlikely, financial markets are concerned that the turbulence could mean Romania wavers in its commitment to narrowing the EU’s biggest budget deficit.

Romania’s currency, the leu, fell to a record low against the euro ahead of Tuesday’s vote.

Bolojan’s coalition came to power 10 months ago during efforts to curb the rise of the far-right Alliance for Uniting Romanians (AUR), which won one-third of parliamentary seats.

Dan himself won a tense presidential poll last May, after a far-right victory in elections the previous year was annulled over allegations of campaign fraud and Russian interference.

The coalition had started to reduce the deficit but frictions with the Social Democrats grew as the leftists’ voter base was hit by austerity.

The party has said it is prepared to rejoin a pro-EU coalition under a different prime minister.

Credit: bbc.com

 

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