HomeEmergencyRomania's largest party teams up with far-right opposition to topple pro-European coalition

Romania’s largest party teams up with far-right opposition to topple pro-European coalition

-

BUCHAREST, April 27 (Reuters) - Romania's largest party ‌in parliament, the Social Democrats, will team up with the hard-right opposition ​Alliance for Uniting Romanians in a bid to topple the pro-European coalition government that it left earlier this month, it said ⁠on Monday, putting the country's EU funding at risk.

The leftist Social Democrats' ministers resigned from Liberal Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan's coalition last week, depriving it of a parliamentary majority and endangering the country's access to ​EU funds, sovereign ratings and debt yields.

Reform-minded Bolojan has refused to resign saying the government had vital reforms to implement in ‌order to tap more than 10 billion euros ($12 billion) worth of pandemic recovery and resilience funds before the European Union's August deadline.

In the wake of a December 2024 general election a broad coalition government came together ⁠10 months ago aiming to contain the gains of a cluster of far-right parties. 

But ⁠Bolojan and the leftists have repeatedly clashed over budget cuts aimed at lowering the deficit from over 9% of economic output in 2024, the EU's highest, to 6.2% this year.   

The Social Democrats have repeatedly said they were willing to rejoin the same pro-European cluster, but without Bolojan at its head. His Liberal party ‌has so far stuck by him, however, saying the Social Democrats have broken the collaboration agreements signed 10 ⁠months ago and ruling out joining another coalition with them.  

A pro-European parliamentary ‌majority cannot be achieved without the Social Democrats, who had previously ​ruled out forming a coalition with the Alliance for Uniting Romanians, the second-largest group in parliament, which is currently leading all opinion surveys with around 35% support.

The two parties control roughly 220 of parliament's ‌464 seats and to topple the government they would need 233 votes, ​which they could muster together with smaller far-right ⁠groupings. Bolojan will also be trying to shore up his support. 

Romania, which has never ‌held a snap election, is currently not due to ⁠hold a general election until 2028.

Former deputy prime minister Marian Neacsu of the Social Democrats hedged his bets on Monday when asked if a ruling coalition with AUR was possible, saying only: "Every journey begins with the ​first step."

AUR leader George Simion ‌said the motion to dismiss Bolojan's cabinet would be filed as soon as 233 lawmakers sign it, adding that ⁠a vote could happen on May 5. He ​said his party was open to talks with all others once the government is toppled.

($1 = 0.8511 ​euros)

(Reporting by Luiza Ilie; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM3Q0NP-VIEWIMAGE

Author

Stay Connected

1,800FansLike
259FollowersFollow
120FollowersFollow
1,263FollowersFollow
90,000SubscribersSubscribe

Related articles

Latest posts

Share on Social Media

spot_img