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Dublin: 15 °C Sunday 19 May, 2013

Romanian PM resigns amid opposition criticism and anti-austerity protests

Emil Boc said he was resigning “to ease the social situation”.

Emil Boc adjusts his glasses at the Romanian parliament in Bucharest last month.
Emil Boc adjusts his glasses at the Romanian parliament in Bucharest last month.
Image: Vadim Ghirda/AP/Press Association Images

THE ROMANIAN PRIME Minister has announced the immediate resignation of himself and his government, saying he wanted to protect the stability of the country.

Emil Boc said he was resigning “to ease the social situation” — referring to weeks of protests in Romania over austerity measures that he introduced in 2010. Opposition politicians called for early parliamentary elections, which are currently scheduled for November.

President Traian Basescu appointed Justice Minister Catalin Predoiu — the only minister in Boc’s Cabinet who is not a member of any political party — to be interim prime minister pending the formation of a new government. Parliament has 60 days and two attempts to approve a new government.

If it fails, the Parliament is dissolved and new elections will be called. The ruling coalition and its partners from minorities, however, have enough votes to elect a new government.

Boc, who became prime minister in 2008, urged Romania’s feuding politicians to be mature and rapidly vote for a new government. He defended his record, saying that he had taken “difficult decisions thinking about the future of Romania, not because I wanted to, but because I had to.”

He added that the International Monetary Fund has forecast growth of up to two per cent this year — lower than expected, but higher than the European Union average.

Basescu is expected to hold talks today with the country’s political parties about the formation of the new government, said his spokesman Valeriu Turcan.

Call for early elections

Opposition politicians hailed the government’s collapse and called for early elections. ”This is a victory for those that demonstrated on the streets,” said Crin Antonescu, who heads the opposition Liberal Party.

“The most corrupt, incompetent and lying government” since the 1989 anti-communist revolt has gone, he said.

Victor Ponta, the leader of the opposition Social Democracy Party said he would ask Basescu to call early elections.

Romania signed up for a €20 billion ($26 billion) loan with the IMF, the European Union and the World Bank in 2009 to help pay salaries and pensions, after the economy shrank by more than 7 per cent.

In 2010, the government increased sales tax from 19 per cent to 24 per cent and cut public workers’ salaries by a quarter to reduce the budget deficit.

In January, Romanians staged weeks of protests to express anger at cronyism and a perception that the government is not interested in the problems of ordinary people in this nation of 22 million.

They protested low living standards, widespread corruption, and the passage of some laws without a parliamentary debate.

“I know that I made difficult decisions, but the fruits have begun to appear,” Boc said in a statement. “The most important thing is the economic stability of the country,” he said, adding, “In times of crisis, the government is not in a popularity contest, but is saving the country.”

Nine injured in Bucharest anti-austerity protest

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Comments (17 Comments)

  • C C Enda and the boys

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    • Why? Do you actually think that the shower in opposition could do anything different.

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    • So do we just accept every bad thing that the current Government does based on your sound logic Chris?

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    • Yeah I have been wondering that actually. A certain group of posters here are quick to scream for the government to resign at the drop of the hat but if there was a general election tomorrow who could you vote for instead. Fianna Fail? Sinn Fein? A ULA government with Joe Higgens as Taoiseach and Richard Boyd ‘People Before Profit except for my expenses’ Barrett as Taniste?

      Reply
    • Neil 06/02/12 #

      @Chris
      It´s quite clear that a Sinn Fein/ULA coalition government in Romania would be able to increase spending and cut taxes at the same time as it runs the IMF and bond markets out of town, i.e. without borrowing any money.

      Reply
    • @ Keith – Not at all. The current bunch are just as bad as the last, I have absolutely no fate in any politician, in or out of government. Does anyone here really think that get rid of the current government and voting in FF or SF, or the Indo’s will actually make any difference at this stage.

      Reply
  • I personally was sick of the last Government telling lie after lie to us and am now equally sick to find that the current government is doing the exact same thing, I honestly don’t know what the answer is, but would be open to suggestions that didn’t involve FF/FG/LAB

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  • As may be hinted at but difficult to accept is that Gerry Adam’s and his party are the obvious choice as they have spoken the truth all through the election to this present time. I am not a shinner or ff or fg but am looking at this from the outside.
    Think of it this way, by virtue of their experience in dealing with the British Empire and the obvious oppression of the people Sinn Fein are the only ones with experience in dealing with the Banking empire that is taking away life and lives of the people. Although you could say, this was done illegally but that could be said about the banks, the government and not to mention about the shinners past.

    Reply
    • Neil 06/02/12 #

      @Storyteller

      Any party which says it can avoid depending on the whims of IMF or the bond markets at the same time as it increases spending and avoids new taxes is not telling the truth when its from a basis of a 10bn + primary budget deficit.

      Reply
    • Doubt we would have any problem getting the passwords to those mysterious Anglo files which by the way the investigators still cannot get access to.
      Time for a little waterboarding I say !!!

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  • Wait a politician who listens to his people(even if it took a while)and puts the well being of his people before his own pocket? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KwX9sMzbk7A&feature=g-all-f&context=G2f8e156FAAAAAAAABAA

    On a more serious note, an example as being set for what is to come for our boys. Let’s hope we drive our um main parties TD’s out of town too!

    Reply
  • @neil, i see this too but it is not what is gathering momentum in the minds of the general public which has been blatantly disregarded and sold to the banks on the behalf of the people by the Government that promised not to do this before being elected due to the behavior so apparently clear as FF did , now their (FG Lab) doing the same, and totally not mandated by their promises pre-election.

    It is them that are making Sinn Fein look good and strikingly more thrust worthy to the public to which they will come a time when they will be put into power, despite the misgivings of the general public because they will be left with no alternative, gifted to them from the standard bearing parties of FG LAB and the fallen from grace FF who which FG and LAB are following step by step to the same pit that FF fell into. Corruption, Lies, deceit, cronyism, etc, etc, etc, makes the Sinn fein look like the best boys in the class to the desperate.

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    • Being honest I really wouldn’t want it to see SF/ULA/PBP and the other random Independents in power. However it might be fun to watch them have to put their money where their mouths are. And it might be fun to watch the SF cheerleaders here fall over themselves to explain what’s happened when they realise that actually nothing really would have changed. We’d just have exchanged one mode of austerity for another.

      What is it with Irish people and populism? FF were the ultimate populists and their populist rhetoric led us into the mess we are in. Yet it seems that we haven’t still had enough of it because now that FF have been forced to vacate that space SF have stepped right into the gap and there are people here who seem to think that they can deliver everything without any hardship.

      So apparantly we can reduce our fiscal deficit without any cutbacks, any outside help and any income tax rises (apart from the supposed thousands and thousands of wealthy people that SF seem to think are still in this country and who they will tax into oblivion). It’s just not credible policy.

      Reply
  • Must have absolutely no Irish blood in his veins so.

    Reply

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