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explain how the party managed to build support so rapidly.
The most recent legislative elections held in Romania in December 2020 produced what was regarded by most political observers as a major surprise: a brand new, almost obscure, populist party, the Alliance for the Unity of Romanians – with an acronym that means ‘gold’ (AUR) – managed to gain over 9 per cent of the vote. The success of this ‘stealth party’ was missed by most pollsters and analysts. In the local elections that were held only two months before the legislative elections, the AUR only gained 1 per cent of the vote.
On top of that, several smaller parties fell victim to the 5% threshold for entering Parliament. The most remarkable losers were the Popular Movement Party (PMP) of former President Traian Băsescu and the PRO Romania Party of former Prime Minister Victor Ponta. The outcome also indicated a fragmented electorate, with no party managing to win more than 30 per cent of the vote. Finally, the
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Women are hard to find in the new Romanian government: just one of the 21 cabinet ministers in Florin Cîțu’s executive is female.
Erstwhile finance chief Florin Cîțu has been sworn in as Romania’s new prime minister. Cîțu, pictured above, will lead a three-party coalition including his own Liberal party (PNL), USR-Plus, and the Hungarian Democratic Union (UDMR).
Cîțu’s confirmation follows two weeks of negotiations that came after a parliamentary election on December 6. While the Social-Democrats (PSD) emerged as the largest party, it won just 30 per cent of the vote, leaving it well short of a majority. Together, the three, broadly centre-right parties that will make up the new coalition have around 55 per cent of the seats in Romania’s parliament. The 17 MPs who represent Romania’s ethnic minorities have also pledged support.
Geldwäsche, Immobilienbetrug, Gründung einer kriminellen Vereinigung: Tal Siberstein in Bukarest verurteilt - ZUERST! zuerst.de - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from zuerst.de Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.