HomeEmergencyRomania's two largest parties call no-confidence vote in pro-European government

Romania’s two largest parties call no-confidence vote in pro-European government

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BUCHAREST, April 28 (Reuters) - The ‌minority government of Romania's pro-European Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan could ​fall in early May after his former coalition partner, the leftist Social Democrats, and the far-right ⁠opposition submitted a no-confidence motion on Tuesday.

The coalition's collapse raised the prospect of weeks or months of policy deadlock that could put pressure on Romania's debt yields, ​credit ratings and access to European Union funds as talks are held on a new parliamentary ‌majority.

Social Democrat ministers quit the government last week, but the reform-minded Bolojan refused to step down, saying the government had vital reforms to implement to tap more than 10 ⁠billion euros' ($12 billion) worth of pandemic recovery and resilience funds before ⁠the EU's August deadline.

Romania must also further lower the EU's largest budget deficit - to 6.2% of economic output this year from over 9% in 2024 - or risk losing its investment grade rating.

Romania's largest employers' association Concordia said on Tuesday losing the ‌rating would cost Romania 100 billion lei ($23 billion) in higher debt costs over ⁠five years.

While the Social Democrats (PSD), parliament's biggest party, without which ‌a pro-EU majority cannot be attained, have repeatedly ​said they are willing to rejoin the same pro-European party cluster with a different prime minister, the other parties have said they will not collaborate with the ‌PSD again.

The PSD has teamed up with the hard-right ​Alliance for Uniting Romanians (AUR) for a ⁠no-confidence motion but the party's leader has denied any plan to ‌collaborate with AUR beyond the May 5 ⁠no-confidence vote.

If Bolojan survives, he will still need to seek a new confidence vote within 45 days, when the mandate of the interim replacements for the PSD ministers ​who have quit expires.

If the ‌government collapses, centrist President Nicusor Dan, who nominates the prime minister, is widely expected ⁠to attempt to rebuild the four-party ​pro-EU coalition with a different Liberal or a technocrat as prime minister.

(Reporting by ​Luiza Ilie; Editing by Jon Boyle)

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