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2024 Romanian parliamentary election

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2024 Romanian parliamentary election

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All 134[a] seats in the Senate
All 331 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
68 S and 166 D seats needed for a majority
Registered19,503,273
Turnout48.28% (Increase 16.33 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Marcel Ciolacu, September 2024 (cropped).jpg
George Simion (1 July 2024).png
Ilie Bolojan (11 May 2023) (cropped).jpg
Leader Marcel Ciolacu George Simion Ilie Bolojan
Party PSD AUR PNL
Leader's seat DBuzău DBucharest SBihor
Last election 47 S / 110 D 14 S / 33 D 41 S / 93 D
Seats after 36 S / 86 D 28 S / 63 D 22 S / 49 D
Seat change Decrease 11 S / Decrease 24 D Increase 14 S / Increase 30 D Decrease 19 S / Decrease 44 D
Popular vote 2,030,144 1,665,143 1,219,810
Percentage 21.96% 18.01% 13.20%
Swing Decrease 6.94 pp Increase 8.93 pp Decrease 11.99 pp

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Elena_Lasconi_(1_July_2024)_(cropped).jpg
Diana Șoșoacă (1 July 2024) (cropped).jpg
Anamaria-gavrila-pot (cropped).jpg
Leader Elena Lasconi Diana Șoșoacă Anamaria Gavrilă
Party USR SOS RO POT
Leader's seat Did not stand[c] SBucharest DHunedoara
Last election 25 S / 55 D New New
Seats after 19 S / 40 D 12 S / 28 D 7[b] S / 24 D
Seat change Decrease 6 S / Decrease 15 D New New
Popular vote 1,146,357 679,967 596,745
Percentage 12.40% 7.36% 6.46%
Swing Decrease 2.97 pp New New

  Seventh party Eighth party
 
Kelemen Hunor (22 February 2023) (cropped).jpg
Varujan Pambuccian (2).JPG
Leader Hunor Kelemen Varujan Pambuccian[d]
Party UDMR Minority parties
Leader's seat DHarghita D – Nationwide[e]
Last election 9 S / 21 D 0 S / 18 D
Seats after 10 S / 22 D 0 S / 19 D
Seat change Increase 1 S / Increase 1 D Steady 0 S / Increase 1 D
Popular vote 585,397 129,282
Percentage 6.33% 1.40%
Swing Increase 0.59 pp Decrease 0.27 pp


Prime Minister before election

Marcel Ciolacu
PSD

Prime Minister after election

Marcel Ciolacu
PSD

Parliamentary elections were held in Romania on 1 December 2024.[2][3] No party won a majority in the election, which saw the incumbent National Coalition for Romania, led by the Social Democratic Party and the National Liberal Party (PNL), lose their majority in both chambers of parliament alongside significant gains by far-right parties such as the Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR), S.O.S. Romania, and the Party of Young People (POT). Following the elections, a pro-European grand coalition government was formed between the PSD, the PNL, and the UDMR, with the support of the national minorities. On 23 December, Ciolacu’s second cabinet was inaugurated by a slim margin, with 240 votes out of 465 in favour.

Background

[edit]

Cîțu Cabinet

[edit]

Following the previous legislative elections held in December 2020, the Cîțu Cabinet was appointed, backed by a centre-right coalition of three Romanian political parliamentary parties: the conservative liberal National Liberal Party (PNL), the progressive liberal/neoliberal USR PLUS (which subsequently switched back to the old USR acronym in late 2021), and the Hungarian minority-oriented Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR/RMDSZ).[4]

In September 2021, a major rift within the coalition led to the onset of the 2021 Romanian political crisis. Prime Minister Cîțu, with the backing of President Klaus Iohannis, sacked Justice minister Stelian Ion.[5][6] All the other USR ministers withdrew from the government by 7 September 2021,[7] which left the Cîțu Cabinet in the minority. It subsequently fell in November 2021 in an unparalleled motion of no confidence (the highest number of votes against a government in the political history of post-1989 Romania).

National Coalition for Romania

[edit]

The political crisis ended with the formation of a grand coalition. As a result, the Ciucă Cabinet, backed by the National Coalition for Romania (CNR) comprising the PNL, PSD and the UDMR, was formed and remained in power until June 2023, when the latter of the three parties withdrew from the majority. On 15 June 2023, as part of the rotation government deal, the National Liberals made way for the Social Democratic-led Ciolacu Cabinet.

9 June elections

[edit]

Foreshadowing the elections in December, the 2024 European Parliament and local elections took place on 9 June. The two governing parties formed an electoral alliance in the European Parliament election, as well as in some constituencies in the local elections. The results were seen as a victory for the CNR,[8] although the PNL suffered many losses to their coalition partners in races where they ran separately.[9] The newly formed United Right Alliance registered significant losses, with the People's Movement Party losing 88% of its mayors and the Save Romania Union losing key races in Brașov, as well as Bucharest, particularly Sectors 1 and 2, where the mayoral candidates who lost their seats claimed that electoral fraud took place.[10] The USR's poor performance led to the resignation of Cătălin Drulă as party president and his replacement by Câmpulung mayor Elena Lasconi.[11]

24 November presidential elections

[edit]

The election is taking place amid political uncertainty caused by the results of the first round of the 2024 Romanian presidential election on 24 November, during which independent candidate Călin Georgescu and the USR's Elena Lasconi advanced to the runoff scheduled on 8 December at the expense of Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu of the PSD and Nicolae Ciucă of the PNL.[12] On 6 December, the Constitutional Court of Romania annulled the first round of the election, as it came out that Georgescu received around €1,000,000 in illegal funding.[13][14] Alleged Russian state interference in the election was widely reported.[15][16][17][18]

Timeline

[edit]

Date of the election

[edit]

Both parliamentary and presidential terms were scheduled to end in late 2024. After consulting the various parliamentary groups, the Ciolacu Government announced that the parliamentary elections would take place on 1 December, with the presidential elections taking place around the same time (first round on 24 November, second round on 8 December),[19] making 2024 the first time for such an electoral concatenation in Romania since the 2004 general election.[20]

The election date also coincides with Great Union Day, the Romanian national holiday.[19]

Timetable

[edit]
Date Event
7 September Deadline for the Permanent Electoral Authority to communicate to the Central Electoral Bureau the number of registered voters.
10 September Deadline for parties to file for the creation of electoral alliances.
2 October Deadline for political parties, electoral alliances and organizations representing national minorities to file their candidates list.
17 October Deadline for independents to file for their candidacy.
Deadline for Romanians abroad to register to vote.
22 October Deadline for political parties, alliances and organizations representing national minorities to choose their symbols.
30 October The order in which the candidates will appear on the ballot is determined by a random draw in each constituency.
1 November The start of the electoral campaign.
16 November Deadline for manufacturing official ballots and stamps.
28 November Deadline for receiving mail votes.
30 November The end of the electoral campaign.
Voting at polling stations abroad began at 7:00 a.m. local time.
1 December Voting in Romania began at 7:00 a.m.

Electoral system

[edit]
Palace of the Parliament

Both the 331 members of the Chamber of Deputies as well as the 136 members of the Senate are elected in 43 multi-member constituencies based on Romania's 41 counties, the Municipality of Bucharest, as well as the Romanian diaspora using party-list proportional representation. Law no. 208/2015 outlines that each constituency is to be awarded one deputy every 73,000 people and one senator every 168,000 people in accordance with the population data collected on 1 January of the previous year by the National Institute of Statistics (INS). Constituencies cannot have less than 4 deputies and 2 senators.[21]

Parties must pass a threshold of 5% of the national vote or at least 20% of the vote in four constituencies. Electoral alliances must pass a higher threshold, namely 8% for those with two member-parties, 9% for three and 10% for alliances of more. Further seats (currently 18) can be added in the Chamber of Deputies for ethnic minority groups that compete in the elections and pass a lower threshold (5% of the votes needed to win a seat in the lower chamber, calculated by dividing the number of votes of parties, alliances and independent candidates that passed the threshold by the amount of seats that they won).[22]

Constituencies Allocated deputies Allocated senators
Bucharest 29 13
Iași 12 5
Constanța, Prahova 11
Bacău, Cluj, Dolj, Suceava, Timiș 10 4
Argeș, Bihor, Brașov, Galați 9
Mureș 8
Neamț 8 3
Arad, Buzău, Dâmbovița, Maramureș, Vaslui 7
Botoșani, Hunedoara, Sibiu, Olt 6
Vâlcea 6 2
Alba, Bistrița-Năsăud, Brăila, Caraș-Severin, Gorj, Harghita, Ilfov, Satu Mare, Teleorman, Vrancea 5
Călărași, Covasna, Giurgiu, Ialomița, Mehedinți, Sălaj, Tulcea, Romanian diaspora 4

Parties and alliances

[edit]

Parliamentary composition

[edit]
Party Ideology Leader(s) Initial seating[f] Current seats Government
Votes Seats Cîțu
(2020–2021)
Ciucă
(2021–2023)
Ciolacu
(2023–)
PSD Social democracy
Social conservatism
Marcel Ciolacu 28.9% (D)
29.3% (S)
110 / 330
47 / 136
103 / 330
49 / 136
Opposition Coalition
(CNR)
PNL Social conservatism
Christian democracy
Nicolae Ciucă 25.1% (D)
25.5% (S)
93 / 330
41 / 136
79 / 330
37 / 136
Coalition Coalition
(CNR)
USR Liberalism Elena Lasconi 15.3% (D)
16.0% (S)
55 / 330
25 / 136
41 / 330
20 / 136
Coalition Opposition
AUR Romanian nationalism
Right-wing populism
George Simion 9.0% (D)
9.1% (S)
33 / 330
14 / 136
26 / 330
12 / 136
Opposition
UDMR
(RMDSZ)
Hungarian minority interests Hunor Kelemen 5.7% (D)
5.8% (S)
21 / 330
9 / 136
20 / 330
9 / 136
Coalition Coalition
(CNR)
Opposition
FD Christian democracy Ludovic Orban New Split from PNL
16 / 330
3 / 136
Opposition
REPER Liberalism Dragoș Pîslaru
Ramona Strugariu
New Split from USR
10 / 330
2 / 136
Opposition
PUSL Social conservatism Daniel Ionașcu 1.0% (D)
1.1% (S)
0 / 330
0 / 136
4 / 330
1 / 136
Confidence and supply agreement
(parliamentary support for the CNR)
NR Ultranationalism Ninel Peia New Split from AUR
4 / 330
1 / 136
Opposition
Romania in Action Centrism
Romanian patriotism
Mihai Apostolache new
2 / 330
2 / 136
Opposition
Independents or others 7.57% (D)
0.85% (S)
18 / 330
0 / 136
25 / 330
1 / 136
Vacant seats
0 / 330
1 / 136

New political parties

[edit]

In July 2021, the nationalist[23] Romanian Village Party (RoSAT), led by Marian Vișu-Iliescu, was launched, claiming to represent the interests of peasants, ignored by the major parties.[24]

On 19 September 2021, former PSD president Liviu Dragnea, along with former ally Codrin Ștefănescu, launched the Alliance for the Homeland (Romanian: Alianța pentru Patrie, ApP), a split-off from PSD and "an alternative" to it according to both.[25]

On 3 October 2021, former PNL Prime Minister Ludovic Orban, who had just been defeated for the leadership of the PNL by Florin Cîțu at the 2021 PNL party congress, stated that he is willing "to create a new political construction which would be ready to continue PNL's legacy".[26][27] In this regard, at that time it was thought that he could be following Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu, another former national liberal Prime Minister who subsequently left the PNL in order to establish his own political party, more specifically the Liberal Reformist Party (PLR), subsequently known as the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats (ALDE) after its merger with the Conservative Party (PC), a now defunct political party which was eventually absorbed by the PNL during late March 2022.[28]

In addition, before further concrete steps on behalf of Orban, various commentators stated that Orban's faction could part ways with the main PNL should he not be designated PM after Cîțu's dismissal by the Parliament (which also occurred in the meantime). Subsequently, after PNL started negotiations with the PSD, more and more MPs resigned from the PNL and joined Orban's faction in the Parliament. Orban's new party was officially registered in December 2021 and is called "Force of the Right" (or FD for short).[29]

In November 2021, a new party called NOW (Romanian: ACUM) was formed. It has a progressive and green ideology.[30]

Additionally, in November 2021 the S.O.S. Romania party was founded by Maricel Viziteu, Adeluța and Gabriel Gib. However, it became later known on the Romanian political scene in May 2022, after senator Diana Iovanovici Șoșoacă, elected on the Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) list, joined the party, and eventually became its leader.[31]

Former PSD president and Prime Minister Viorica Dăncilă has, in the meantime, became president of the Nation People Together (NOI) party.[32]

After the March 2022 congress of the Alliance for the Union of Romanians, Dan Grăjdeanu, the president of the Orthodox Brotherhood NGO, announced that his NGO will end the collaboration with AUR and launch its own political party. On 17 April 2022, a party affiliated with the Brotherhood was created: the National Movement. It is led by Mihai Tîrnoveanu.[33][34][35]

Former independent/technocratic Prime Minister and PLUS/USR PLUS/USR member (as well as former USR president) Dacian Cioloș officially quit the USR on 31 May 2022 to form a brand new party called REPER.[36] Several MEPs (more specifically 4) who have been previously elected on the lists of the 2020 USR PLUS Alliance at the 2019 European Parliament election in Romania have sided with Dacian Cioloș for his newly established political project, but still remain affiliated with the Renew group in the European Parliament. REPER can thus be considered (and is, in actuality) a splinter of USR.

On 10 July 2022, ex-AUR deputy Mihai Lasca launched his own political party, called Patriots of the Romanian People.[37] The party was labelled as Eurosceptic, Romanian nationalist and anti-LGBT.[38]

The Green Party (PV) was also relaunched[39] under the new name of the Green Party (The Greens) – (Romanian: Partidul Verde – Verzii)). The party is currently led by two co-presidents, more specifically Marius Lazăr and Lavinia Cosma (former USR member between 2016 and 2019). The party first appeared in the polls in the beginning of 2023.[40]

In late September 2023, PNL vice-president and deputy Ben Oni Ardelean resigned from the party and announced that he is initiating a new political project.[41] Consequently, he recently launched an allegedly conservative political party called Hope's Movement (Romanian: Mișcarea Speranței) for the disillusioned electorate in Romania.[42]

Civil society activists announced at the end of November the launch of the Party for Nature, People and Animals (Romanian: Partidul pentru Natură, Oameni și Animale – NOA). The party is temporarily led by Lucian Rad, former county councilor in Brașov.[43]

On September 2, 2024, a group of 10 MP joined a new party called DREPT Party. The party will be led by former independent MEP Vlad Gheorghe.

The progressive Health Education Nature Sustainability Party (SENS), was formed around independent ex-USR MEP Nicolae Ștefănuță, and achieved the necessary 100.000 signatures.[44]

The centrist Romania in Action Party, formed by the supporters of the independent candidate for president Mircea Geoană, managed to collect over 160,000 signatures and will have candidates in all counties as well as in the diaspora.[45]

New political alliances

[edit]

In May 2022, the Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party (PNȚCD) announced that it will prepare a new political alliance with the Alliance for the Homeland (ApP, formerly known under the acronym PAINE)[46] for the forthcoming Romanian parliamentary elections scheduled to take place in late 2024. The two parties will allegedly form a so-called "sovereignist" block which will oppose the National Coalition for Romania (CNR).[47] In late August 2022 however, Liviu Dragnea, strongly associated in the past with the party at an unofficial level, had decided to indefinitely distance himself from the ApP.[48]

In June 2023, incumbent USR leader Cătălin Drulă stated that the Save Romania Union (USR) wants to form a right-wing pole able to win the 2024 elections.[49] The alleged right-wing pole is envisaged to form around the USR and become the winner of all the elections scheduled in 2024 in Romania, according to the incumbent USR leader. In these regards, discussions have already been carried out between USR and the People's Movement Party (PMP).[50] The right-wing alliance proposed by the USR is presented as an alternative to the current ruling CNR coalition formed by the Social Democratic Party (PSD) and the National Liberal Party (PNL). The respective right-wing or centre-right alliance/electoral block might also include the Force of the Right (FD). It was later on reported in October 2023 by a USR member that the Force of the Right (FD) will be included in the respective alliance/electoral block at national level as well as the fact that he does not exclude punctual future collaborations on several political measures with the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR/RMDSZ).[51]

On 4 July 2023, the Socialist Romania Alliance (ARS), formed by the Romanian Socialist Party (PSR) and the Social Democratic Workers' Party (PSDM) was registered.[52]

On 23 September 2023, various extra-parliamentary far-right, ultra-nationalist and traditionalist conservative groups announced the creation of the Nationalist Bloc, led by Bogdan Mihai Alecu.[53][54][55][56]

On 14 November 2023, at an AUR press conference, Lidia Vadim Tudor (the daughter of the late Corneliu Vadim Tudor), former Minister for Business Environment Ilan Laufer (who is also the president of the National Identity Force), businessman Muhammad Murad, entrepreneur Sorin Constantinescu and Sorin Ilieșiu, as well as deputies Florică Calotă (who was elected on PNL list), Daniel Forea (elected on PSD list), Dumitru Viorel Focșa (elected on AUR, but later left) and senators Ovidiu Iosif Florean (elected on PNL list), Călin Gheorghe Matieș (elected on PSD list) and Vasilică Potecă (elected on PNL list) announced that they are joining AUR for the next election.[57] Later, on 21 November, AUR announced, together with the Romanian Village Party, National Rebirth Alliance, Romanian Republican Party and National Peasants' Alliance the creation of a Sovereigntist Alliance to contest at the 2024 Romanian parliamentary election.[58][59]

On 25 November 2023, several extra-parliamentary political parties announced the creation of the Romanian Sovereigntist Bloc, which includes: Right Republican Party, Romanian Nationhood Party, Coalition for the Nation, Reformist Party, Homeland Party, Christian Social Popular Union Party.[60][61]

On 9 December 2023, leaders of Green Party (Verzii) and Ecologist Party of Romania (PER) announced a new political alliance on political scene for 2024 European Parliament elections, AER for Romania Alliance .[62]

On 14 December 2023, Save Romania Union, Force of the Right and the People's Movement Party officially announced the creation of a right-wing electoral alliance to contest in the 2024 elections.[63] On 18 December, the alliance was formally named as United Right Alliance.[64]

On 14 March 2024, the Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party formed an alliance with the Strong Romania Party.[65]

On 24 September 2024, Renewing Romania's European Project (REPER), the Democracy and Solidarity Party (DEMOS), the NOW Party (ACUM), and independents launched the Platform for Democracy, Prosperity, and Progress, a cross-spectrum alliance of pro-European and progressive parties.[66] Volt Romania (VOLT) also joined this alliance.

Party-lists running

[edit]

The following party-lists will be on the ballot in December:[67] Note that not all the parties listed below have submitted lists of candidates in all the counties. Also, the independent candidates can run only in one county.

List Party Abbr. Ideology Alliance with
01. National Liberal Party PNL Christian democracy
Social conservatism
02. Force of the Right FD Liberal conservatism
Christian democracy
PMP, AD, PNȚMM
03. Social Democratic Party PSD Social democracy
Social conservatism
PUSL, PRO
04. Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania UDMR Hungarian minority interests
Social conservatism
AMT, MPE
05. Save Romania Union USR Liberalism
Anti-corruption
06. Alliance for the Union of Romanians AUR Ultranationalism
Christian right
BUN
07. United Social Democratic Party PSDU Social democracy
Christian democracy[68]
08. Patriots of the Romanian People PPR Conservatism
Sovereignism
09. Renewing Romania's European Project REPER Liberalism
Progressivism
Demos, ACUM, Volt
10. Alternative for National Dignity ADN Nationalism
Populism
11. Romanian National Conservative Party PNCR National conservatism
Christian right
PRR, FIN
12. Romania in Action Party România
în Acțiune
Localism
Civic nationalism
13. National Christian Alliance ANC Christian nationalism
Sovereignism
14. Party of Young People POT Right-wing populism
Sovereigntism
15. Romanian Ecologist Party PER Green conservatism
Christian democracy
16. Independent Social Democratic Party PSDi Social democracy
Sovereignism
BSR
17. United Pensioners' Party PPU Pensioners' interests
18. Socialist Romania Alliance ARS Socialism
Communism
PSR, PSDM, PCRXXI
19. Justice and Respect in Europe for All Party DREPT Centrism
Anti-corruption
CURAJ, ECO, PDU
20. Health Education Nature Sustainability Party SENS Green politics
Progressivism
21. S.O.S. Romania SOS RO Nationalism
Russophilia
22. New Romania Party PNR Nationalism
Anti-corruption
23. Democratic Union of Turkic-Muslim Tatars of Romania UDTTMR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
24. Union of Poles of Romania UPR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
25. Democratic Turkish Union of Romania UDTR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
26. Forum of Czechs in Romania FCR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
27. League of Albanians of Romania ALAR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
28. Bulgarian Union of Banat–Romania UBB-R Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
29. Federation of the Jewish Communities in Romania FCER Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
30. Party of the Roma PRPE Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
31. Association of Macedonians of Romania AMR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
32. Community of the Lipovan Russians in Romania CRLR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
33. Hellenic Union of Romania UER Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
34. Democratic Union of Slovaks and Czechs of Romania UDSCR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
35. Cultural Union of Ruthenians of Romania UCRR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
36. Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania FDGR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
37. Union of Armenians of Romania UAR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
38. Union of Croats of Romania UCR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
39. Union of Serbs of Romania USR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
40. Union of the Ukrainians of Romania UUR Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
41. Association of Italians of Romania Ro.As.It. Ethnic minority parties
Minority interests
42. Independent candidate (IF) Voinea Gheorghe Sorinei N/A
43. Independent candidate (CJ) Sabin Sărmaș N/A

Opinion polls

[edit]

Results

[edit]

The incumbent National Coalition for Romania (PSD and PNL) lost their majority in both chambers in the election, with far-right parties (AUR, SOS RO, and POT) making substantial gains at their expense.[69]

Senate

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Social Democratic Party2,065,08722.3036–11
Alliance for the Union of Romanians1,694,70518.3028+14
National Liberal Party1,322,46814.2822–19
Save Romania Union1,134,83112.2619–6
S.O.S. Romania718,4097.7612New
Party of Young People591,9276.397New
Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania590,7836.3810+1
Health Education Nature Sustainability Party263,1732.840New
Force of the Right[g]173,7031.880New
United Social Democratic Party164,6591.780New
Renewing Romania's European Project[h]126,4081.370New
Justice and Respect in Europe for All Party114,5001.240New
Romanian National Conservative Party50,2870.540New
Patriots of the Romanian People48,4360.5200
Independent Social Democratic Party41,7120.4500
Romanian Ecologist Party38,5610.4200
National Christian Alliance31,0940.3400
Romania in Action Party30,2520.330New
New Romania Party17,2030.1900
Socialist Romania Alliance16,2560.1800
Alternative for National Dignity10,4730.1100
National Action League Party3,8380.040New
Party of Faithful People8060.0100
Patria Party4930.0100
Geto-Dacian Union Party4800.0100
Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party3710.0000
Party of Justice3250.0000
Republican Party of Romania3140.0000
Green Party2900.0000
Phralipe Party of the Roma2870.0000
Independents7,8260.0800
Total9,259,957100.001340
Valid votes9,259,95798.41
Invalid/blank votes149,5571.59
Total votes9,409,514100.00
Registered voters/turnout19,503,27348.25
Source: Permanent Electoral Authority
Seat counts

Chamber of Deputies

[edit]
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Social Democratic Party2,030,14421.9686–24
Alliance for the Union of Romanians1,665,14318.0163+30
National Liberal Party1,219,81013.2049–44
Save Romania Union1,146,35712.4040–15
S.O.S. Romania679,9677.3628New
Party of Young People596,7456.4624New
Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania585,3976.3322+1
Health Education Nature Sustainability Party276,4942.990New
Force of the Right[i]189,6782.050New
United Social Democratic Party177,1371.920New
Renewing Romania's European Project[j]114,2231.240New
Justice and Respect in Europe for All Party107,4741.160New
Romanian National Conservative Party45,6870.490New
Patriots of the Romanian People40,9600.4400
Romanian Ecologist Party34,6410.3700
Independent Social Democratic Party33,3720.3600
Romania in Action Party28,5040.310New
National Christian Alliance25,7890.2800
New Romania Party14,1070.1500
Party of the Roma "Pro Europa"13,8810.1510
Association of Macedonians of Romania13,8000.1510
Socialist Romania Alliance12,8490.1400
League of Albanians of Romania9,1770.1010
Union of the Ukrainians of Romania8,7500.0910
Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania8,5770.0910
Union of Serbs of Romania7,9620.0910
Alternative for National Dignity7,7470.0800
Hellenic Union of Romania7,5650.0810
Community of the Lipovan Russians in Romania7,4340.0810
Democratic Union of Slovaks and Czechs of Romania7,4200.0810
Federation of the Jewish Communities in Romania5,2810.0610
Bulgarian Union of Banat–Romania5,0890.0610
Democratic Union of Turkic-Muslim Tatars of Romania4,9080.0510
Union of Armenians of Romania4,7470.0510
Cultural Union of Ruthenians of Romania4,5710.0510
Democratic Turkish Union of Romania4,5470.0510
Union of Croats of Romania4,4130.0510
Union of Poles of Romania "Dom Polski"4,2150.0510
Association of Italians of Romania4,1280.0410
National Action League Party2,9120.030New
Forum of Czechs in Romania2,8170.031+1
Party of Faithful People1,1430.0100
Geto-Dacian Union Party4350.0000
Patria Party3910.0000
Republican Party of Romania2790.0000
Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party2700.0000
Green Party2480.0000
United Pensioners' Party2290.0000
Party of Justice1840.0000
Independents76,0430.8200
Total9,243,641100.00331
Valid votes9,243,64198.17
Invalid/blank votes171,8771.83
Total votes9,415,518100.00
Registered voters/turnout19,503,27348.28
Source: Permanent Electoral Authority
Seat counts

Aftermath

[edit]

Leaders of the Social Democratic Party (PSD), the National Liberal Party (PNL), Save Romania Union (USR), the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR), and representatives of national minorities stated that they all have agreed on the need to form a pro-EU coalition with each other and are committed to Romania's European and Euro-Atlantic values.[70] The agreement was finalised on 10 December.[71]

This agreement was created in the case that the pro-Russian candidate for president, Călin Georgescu, is elected, and it was seen as an attempt to "crowd him out". The parties of the proposed coalition then endorsed the pro-EU candidate, Elena Lasconi, in the second round, who was supposed to face Georgescu on 8 December, though it has been postponed. This was also seen as an attempt to block the far-right from entering government, which includes AUR, S.O.S. Romania, and POT.[70] Following the annulment of the presidential election by the Constitutional Court, the new government formed after the parliamentary election is expected to set new dates for a presidential vote.[72]

On 10 December, a coalition government was proposed between the PSD, PNL, USR, and UDMR, alongside parties of national minorities.[73] However, the PSD threatened to withdraw from the coalition negotiations on 19 December, with Marcel Ciolacu stating that the PSD would vote for a right-wing government in Parliament.[74]

Ultimately, after leaders of the parties met with President Iohannis on 22 December, a coalition agreement was reached between the PSD, PNL and UDMR, with Marcel Ciolacu leading the new government. While this coalition has a majority in the Senate, parties of national minorities will need to provide their support in order to reach a majority in the Chamber of Deputies. As per the agreement, the PSD will hold eight ministries, the PNL six, and the UDMR two. Ciolacu’s second cabinet was inaugurated on 23 December.[75]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ 2 of the 136 seats in the Senate were unassigned, due to no candidates running in the election from POT in Giurgiu and Ialomita counties
  2. ^ Initially won 9 seats, but did not have any candidates for Giurgiu and Ialomita counties. The 2 seats were left vacant.
  3. ^ Standing for President in the presidential election
  4. ^ Pambuccian, a member of the Union of Armenians of Romania, has been the parliamentary leader of the national minorities' group since 1996.
  5. ^ National minorities have nationwide mandates and do not represent a specific county.[1]
  6. ^ as per the 2020 results
  7. ^ Alliance of Liberal-Conservative Right Forces
  8. ^ Platform for Democracy, Prosperity, and Progress
  9. ^ Alliance of Liberal-Conservative Right Forces
  10. ^ Platform for Democracy, Prosperity, and Progress

References

[edit]
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