Romanian president hosts talks to appoint third PM

Bloomberg

Romanian President Klaus Iohannis is meeting political parties as the Black Sea nation looks to appoint its third prime minister in a year following this week’s shock unraveling of the government. The Social Democrats, who won a landslide election victory in late 2016, proposed European Parliament lawmaker Viorica Dancila to replace Mihai Tudose as premier. The ruling party is trying to form a lasting government and end infighting that’s jeopardizing one of Europe’s fastest-growing economies. Iohannis, who slammed the Social Democrats’ stewardship, must back Dancila or pick a different candidate. He’s due to end talks with the parties at 4 p.m. in Bucharest.
“The easy way out for everyone is, of course, if the president plays it safe and appoints the ruling coalition’s candidate,” Horia Braun-Erdei, an economist at Erste Group Bank AG, said by email. “He could decide to play tough and refuse to designate their candidate. But given the weakness of the current opposition parties, this may not be his preferred solution.”
Dancila is an ally of Social Democrat leader Liviu Dragnea, who despite being prevented from taking the premier’s job himself because of a criminal conviction remains the ex-communist country’s dominant politician. His party toppled its own government last June amid a spat with then-Premier Sorin Grindeanu. This time round he objected to Tudose’s plans to reshuffle the cabinet and fire the interior minister over a police scandal. Romania is no stranger to political upheaval: it’s had 14 prime ministers since 1990, with only two completing their full term. The new premier will take over an economy that surged an annual 8.8 percent in the third quarter, though the central bank and the European Commission have warned about the sustainability of growth and the budgetary dangers of the Social Democrats’ tax cuts and public-sector wage hikes.

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