DM Monitoring
BUCHAREST: Romanian Prime Minister Ludovic Orban announced his resignation late Monday, after the ruling National Liberal Party (PNL) he leads failed to achieve its goal of scoring the best in Sunday’s parliamentary election.
President Klaus Iohannis soon signed the decree, accepting Orban’s resignation and appointing Defense Minister Nicolae Ciuca as interim prime minister.
The resignation of Orban is generally considered to also clear the way for his party to negotiate a future ruling alliance with other political parties.
“The decision I took has a very precise objective…the negotiations to follow must lead to a government formed by the center-right political formations to clearly support Romania’s Euro-Atlantic orientation,” Orban said after announcing his resignation.
Although the vote counting has not yet ended, the partial results have emerged and there will be no major changes. Not only did the ruling PNL fail to get first place in the general election, but the gap with its main opponent Social Democrats reached a significant five percentage points. The partial results show that the PNL, with 25 percent of the votes, must form a ruling coalition with other future parliamentary parties with similar political concepts to ensure its continuation of the ruling.
The USR-PLUS Alliance, with some 15 percent of votes, is indispensable in this regard, but the latter has repeatedly emphasized that it is impossible to participate in a cabinet led by Orban. Soon after Orban announced his resignation, the USR-PLUS Alliance said that it would pick Dacian Ciolos, one of the two co-chairs of the alliance and former prime minister (between Nov. 2015 and Jan. 2017), as its proposal for Prime Minister for a future coalition government.
Romania held the parliamentary election on Sunday, with a total of 7,136 candidates competing for seats in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate.
According to the latest partial results released by the Central Electoral Bureau, the Social Democratic Party (PSD) has won the parliamentary election by 30.13 percent of the votes cast for the Senate and 29.69 percent for the Chamber of Deputies.