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Romanian Democratic Convention

The Romanian Democratic Convention (Romanian: Convenția Democrată Română or Convenția Democratică Română; abbreviated CDR) was an electoral alliance of several democratic, anti-communist, anti-totalitarian, and centre-right political parties in Romania, active from 1991 until 2000. The most prominent leaders of the CDR throughout the 1990s were by far Corneliu Coposu, Ion Rațiu, and Ion Diaconescu, all three members of the Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party (PNȚCD) - successor and political heir to the National Peasants' Party (PNȚ), active in the Kingdom of Romania between 1926 and 1948).

Romanian Democratic Convention
Convenția Democrată Română
AbbreviationCDR
LeaderCorneliu Coposu
Ion Rațiu
Ion Diaconescu
Emil Constantinescu
Founded26 November 1991 (1991-11-26)
DissolvedDecember 2000 (2000-12)
IdeologyLiberal democracy
Conservative liberalism
Christian democracy
Neoliberalism
Environmentalism
Political positionCentre to centre-right
Colours  Yellow
  Blue
SloganRomanian: Cheia e la tine! (You hold the key)

The name of the CDR was coined by Sergiu Cunescu, the leader of the Romanian Social Democratic Party (PSDR), as stated in an interview during the 1990s by former PNL re-founding president Radu Câmpeanu at Marius Tucă Show by talk show journalist Marius Tucă.[1] An additional minor leader of the Romanian Democratic Convention (CDR) was lawyer and MP Niculae Cerveni (who founded PNL-CD in 1992 and subsequently ran for president on behalf of PLDR in 2000).

History edit

Political composition edit

Seat allocation following the 1990 election
Party Parliament Seats
Chamber Senate
PNL 29 10
PNȚCD 12 1
PER 8 1
PSDR 2
Total
51 / 395
12 / 119

The core members of the CDR included the following political parties:[2]

Eventually, some parties left (more specifically, the main faction of the PNL between 1992 and 1996, as well as the PAC, PSDR, and UDMR/RMDSZ in 1995), while other minor parties joined or were created between mergers within the alliance such as the Liberal Party '93 (PL '93) or the Union of Right-leaning Forces (UFD).

1991–1992: Foundation edit

Seat allocation following the 1992 election
Party Parliament Seats
Chamber Senate
PNȚCD 41 21
PAC 13 7
PNL-AT 11 1
PSDR 10 1
PNL-CD 3 4
PER 4
Total
82 / 341
34 / 143

CDR was founded in 1991, one year before the 1992 elections, mainly by the PNȚCD and the National Liberal Party (PNL). In addition, aside from the aforementioned political forces, several other noteworthy civic and cultural organisations, foundations, and other minor political parties were involved in the foundational process.

Initially, the planned name of the CDR was "The National Convention for Democracy Implementation" (Romanian: Convenţia Națională pentru Implementarea Democrației). Subsequently, the main purpose of the CDR was to amount an effective opposition against the then all-dominating National Salvation Front (FSN), a huge parliamentary bloc made up mostly of former second and third rank members of the Romanian Communist Party (PCR), which assumed leadership of the country shortly after the 1989 Revolution. According to a later interview by Emil Constantinescu, the former President of Romania claimed that the FSN was actually made of former first rank members of the PCR.

1992–1996: Opposition edit

For the period 1992–1996, CDR was the main political opposition force in the Parliament of Romania and in the local administration as well. Although the convention won the capital city of Bucharest and much of the larger urban centres at the 1992 local elections, FSN swept over almost all rural areas and small towns.

The alliance also included the UDMR/RMDSZ, which ran on a separate list, and a number of minor parties and civic organisations that failed to gain parliamentary representation: the Democratic Unity Party, the Christian Democratic Union, the Ecologist Federation of Romania (FER), the Civic Alliance (PAC), and others. Prior to the 1992 general elections, the PNL led by Radu Câmpeanu withdrew from the CDR.

At the 1992 general elections, Emil Constantinescu was the presidential candidate of the convention. He managed to qualify in the second round where he finished second with an electoral score of 38.57% (or 4,641,207 votes).

1996–2000: Government edit

Seat allocation following the 1996 election
Party Parliament Seats
Chamber Senate
PNȚCD 81 25
PNL 28 22
PNL-CD 4 1
PAR 3 3
PER 5 1
FER 1 1
Total
122 / 343
53 / 143

In 1993, the PNL led by Mircea Ionescu-Quintus returned within the CDR. Subsequently, the CDR managed to win the 1996 Romanian elections, and the alliance's presidential candidate, once again Emil Constantinescu, became president with 54.41% (or 7,057,906 votes). The 1996 Romanian general election represented the first peaceful transition of power in the democratic history of Romania after the fall of Communism.

For the period 1996–2000, the CDR formed a grand coalition with the Social Democratic Union (an alliance between the Democratic Party and PSDR) and the UDMR/RMDSZ (Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania). At governing level, this grand coalition resulted in the Ciorbea Cabinet (1996–1998), Vasile Cabinet (1998–1999), and Isărescu Cabinet (1999–2000).

2000–2004: CDR 2000 and extra-parliamentary opposition edit

Due to internal frictions within the alliance (as well as given the somewhat inconsistent and turbulent governing from 1996 to 2000), the PNL decided to withdraw from the CDR prior to the 2000 general elections. Nonetheless, PNȚCD and other parties ran on the CDR 2000 common list for these elections. The alliance did not manage to score the same positive results as it did during the 1990s and, consequently, shortly disbanded since it did not pass the electoral threshold. However, it expressed extra-parliamentary opposition between 2000 and 2004 towards the minority PDSR government led by Adrian Năstase.

Presidents and notable leaders edit

  
The two presidents of the CDR: Corneliu Coposu (left) and Emil Constantinescu (right)

As of mid 2023, of all the aforementioned leaders of the CDR, only Constantinescu and Frunda are still alive.

Electoral history edit

Legislative elections edit

Election Chamber Senate Position Aftermath
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
1992 2,117,144 19.46
82 / 341
2,210,722 20.16
34 / 143
 2nd 1 Opposition to PDSR-PUNR-PRM-PSM government (1992–1996)
1996 3,692,321 30.17
122 / 343
3,772,084 30.70
53 / 143
 1st 2 CDR-USD-UDMR government (1996–2000)
2000 546,135 5.04
0 / 140
575,706 5.29
0 / 140
 6th 
(as CDR 2000)3
Extra-parliamentary opposition to PDSR minority government (2000–2004)

Notes:

1 CDR members in 1992: PNȚCD (21 senators and 41 deputies), PAC (7 senators and 13 deputies), PNL-AT (1 senator and 11 deputies), PSDR (1 senator and 10 deputies), PNL-CD (4 senators and 3 deputies), and PER (no senators and 4 deputies).
2 CDR members in 1996: PNȚCD (25 senators and 81 deputies), PNL (22 senators and 28 deputies), PNL-CD (1 senator and 4 deputies), PAR (3 senators and 3 deputies), PER (1 senator and 5 deputies), and Ecologist Federation of Romania (FER - 1 senator and 1 deputy).
3 CDR 2000 members: PNȚCD, UFD, Ecologist Federation of Romania (FER), National Christian Democratic Alliance (ANCD), and The Moldavians Party (PM).

Local elections edit

National results edit

Election County Councilors (CJ) Mayors Local Councilors (CL) Popular vote % Position
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
1996 1,667,417 19.53
307 / 1,718
2,712,852 26.27
355 / 2,954
1,786,077 19.58
6,525 / 33,429
 2nd 
Election County Presidents (PCJ) Position
Votes % Seats
1992
6 / 41
 2nd 
1996
15 / 41
 2nd 
2000
1 / 41
 4th 

Mayor of Bucharest edit

Election Candidate First round Second round
Votes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position
1996 Victor Ciorbea
39.61%
 1st 
56.74%
 1st 

Presidential elections edit

Election Candidate First round Second round
Votes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position
1992 Emil Constantinescu1 3,717,006
31.1%
 2nd  4,641,207
38.6%
 2nd 
1996 Emil Constantinescu1 3,569,941
28.2%
 2nd  7,057,906
54.4%
 1st 
2000 Mugur Isărescu2 1,069,463
9.5%
 4th  not qualified

Notes:

1 Emil Constantinescu was the common centre-right candidate who was endorsed by the PNȚCD both in 1992 and 1996 as part of the CDR.
2 Mugur Isărescu was endorsed by the PNȚCD at the 2000 elections as part of the re-named CDR 2000 alliance.

Timeline of the political composition of the CDR with all of its constituent parties (1991–2000) edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Radu Câmpeanu și Niculae Cerveni invitați la Marius Tucă Show". Marius Tucă Show. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  2. ^ Roper, Steven D. (Winter 1997). "From Opposition To Government Coalition: Unity And Fragmentation Within The Democratic Convention Of Romania". East European Quarterly. 31 (4): 519.

Bibliography edit

  • Dan Pavel, Iulia Huia, <<Nu putem reuşi decît împreună.>> O istorie analitică a Convenţiei Democratice, 1989-2000, Editura Polirom, Iaşi, 2003
  • Roper, Steven D., <<From Opposition to Government Coalition: Unity and Fragmentation within the Democratic Convention of Romania.>>, East European Quarterly, 1997. Vol. 31, 4: 519–542.

romanian, democratic, convention, romanian, convenția, democrată, română, convenția, democratică, română, abbreviated, electoral, alliance, several, democratic, anti, communist, anti, totalitarian, centre, right, political, parties, romania, active, from, 1991. The Romanian Democratic Convention Romanian Convenția Democrată Romană or Convenția Democratică Romană abbreviated CDR was an electoral alliance of several democratic anti communist anti totalitarian and centre right political parties in Romania active from 1991 until 2000 The most prominent leaders of the CDR throughout the 1990s were by far Corneliu Coposu Ion Rațiu and Ion Diaconescu all three members of the Christian Democratic National Peasants Party PNȚCD successor and political heir to the National Peasants Party PNȚ active in the Kingdom of Romania between 1926 and 1948 Romanian Democratic Convention Convenția Democrată RomanăAbbreviationCDRLeaderCorneliu CoposuIon RațiuIon DiaconescuEmil ConstantinescuFounded26 November 1991 1991 11 26 DissolvedDecember 2000 2000 12 IdeologyLiberal democracyConservative liberalismChristian democracyNeoliberalismEnvironmentalismPolitical positionCentre to centre rightColours Yellow BlueSloganRomanian Cheia e la tine You hold the key Politics of RomaniaPolitical partiesElectionsThe name of the CDR was coined by Sergiu Cunescu the leader of the Romanian Social Democratic Party PSDR as stated in an interview during the 1990s by former PNL re founding president Radu Campeanu at Marius Tucă Show by talk show journalist Marius Tucă 1 An additional minor leader of the Romanian Democratic Convention CDR was lawyer and MP Niculae Cerveni who founded PNL CD in 1992 and subsequently ran for president on behalf of PLDR in 2000 Contents 1 History 1 1 Political composition 1 2 1991 1992 Foundation 1 3 1992 1996 Opposition 1 4 1996 2000 Government 1 5 2000 2004 CDR 2000 and extra parliamentary opposition 2 Presidents and notable leaders 3 Electoral history 3 1 Legislative elections 3 2 Local elections 3 2 1 National results 3 2 2 Mayor of Bucharest 3 3 Presidential elections 4 Timeline of the political composition of the CDR with all of its constituent parties 1991 2000 5 See also 6 References 7 BibliographyHistory editPolitical composition edit Seat allocation following the 1990 election Party Parliament SeatsChamber SenatePNL 29 10PNȚCD 12 1PER 8 1PSDR 2 Total 51 395 12 119The core members of the CDR included the following political parties 2 Christian Democratic National Peasants Party PNȚCD 1991 2001 Ecologist Federation of Romania FER 1991 2001 Romanian Ecologist Party PER 1991 2000 Civic Alliance Party PAC 1991 1995 Romanian Social Democratic Party PSDR 1991 1995 Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania UDMR RMDSZ 1991 1992 1992 1995 National Liberal Party PNL 1991 1992 1993 1999 National Liberal Party Democratic Convention PNL CD 1992 1997 National Liberal Party Youth Wing PNL AT 1992 1993 Liberal Party 93 PL 93 1993 1995 Union of Right leaning Forces PAR then UFD 1996 2001 National Christian Democratic Alliance ANCD 1999 2001 The Moldavians Party PM 1999 2001 Eventually some parties left more specifically the main faction of the PNL between 1992 and 1996 as well as the PAC PSDR and UDMR RMDSZ in 1995 while other minor parties joined or were created between mergers within the alliance such as the Liberal Party 93 PL 93 or the Union of Right leaning Forces UFD 1991 1992 Foundation edit Seat allocation following the 1992 election Party Parliament SeatsChamber SenatePNȚCD 41 21PAC 13 7PNL AT 11 1PSDR 10 1PNL CD 3 4PER 4 Total 82 341 34 143CDR was founded in 1991 one year before the 1992 elections mainly by the PNȚCD and the National Liberal Party PNL In addition aside from the aforementioned political forces several other noteworthy civic and cultural organisations foundations and other minor political parties were involved in the foundational process Initially the planned name of the CDR was The National Convention for Democracy Implementation Romanian Convenţia Națională pentru Implementarea Democrației Subsequently the main purpose of the CDR was to amount an effective opposition against the then all dominating National Salvation Front FSN a huge parliamentary bloc made up mostly of former second and third rank members of the Romanian Communist Party PCR which assumed leadership of the country shortly after the 1989 Revolution According to a later interview by Emil Constantinescu the former President of Romania claimed that the FSN was actually made of former first rank members of the PCR 1992 1996 Opposition edit For the period 1992 1996 CDR was the main political opposition force in the Parliament of Romania and in the local administration as well Although the convention won the capital city of Bucharest and much of the larger urban centres at the 1992 local elections FSN swept over almost all rural areas and small towns The alliance also included the UDMR RMDSZ which ran on a separate list and a number of minor parties and civic organisations that failed to gain parliamentary representation the Democratic Unity Party the Christian Democratic Union the Ecologist Federation of Romania FER the Civic Alliance PAC and others Prior to the 1992 general elections the PNL led by Radu Campeanu withdrew from the CDR At the 1992 general elections Emil Constantinescu was the presidential candidate of the convention He managed to qualify in the second round where he finished second with an electoral score of 38 57 or 4 641 207 votes 1996 2000 Government edit Seat allocation following the 1996 election Party Parliament SeatsChamber SenatePNȚCD 81 25PNL 28 22PNL CD 4 1PAR 3 3PER 5 1FER 1 1Total 122 343 53 143In 1993 the PNL led by Mircea Ionescu Quintus returned within the CDR Subsequently the CDR managed to win the 1996 Romanian elections and the alliance s presidential candidate once again Emil Constantinescu became president with 54 41 or 7 057 906 votes The 1996 Romanian general election represented the first peaceful transition of power in the democratic history of Romania after the fall of Communism For the period 1996 2000 the CDR formed a grand coalition with the Social Democratic Union an alliance between the Democratic Party and PSDR and the UDMR RMDSZ Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania At governing level this grand coalition resulted in the Ciorbea Cabinet 1996 1998 Vasile Cabinet 1998 1999 and Isărescu Cabinet 1999 2000 2000 2004 CDR 2000 and extra parliamentary opposition edit Due to internal frictions within the alliance as well as given the somewhat inconsistent and turbulent governing from 1996 to 2000 the PNL decided to withdraw from the CDR prior to the 2000 general elections Nonetheless PNȚCD and other parties ran on the CDR 2000 common list for these elections The alliance did not manage to score the same positive results as it did during the 1990s and consequently shortly disbanded since it did not pass the electoral threshold However it expressed extra parliamentary opposition between 2000 and 2004 towards the minority PDSR government led by Adrian Năstase Presidents and notable leaders edit nbsp nbsp The two presidents of the CDR Corneliu Coposu left and Emil Constantinescu right Corneliu Coposu PNȚCD early to mid 1990s Ion Rațiu PNȚCD early 1990s Ion Diaconescu PNȚCD early to late 1990s Emil Constantinescu PNȚCD late 1990s Radu Campeanu PNL only during the early 1990s Mircea Ionescu Quintus PNL mid to late 1990s Niculae Cerveni PNL early 1990s PNL CD early to late 1990s Geza Domokos UDMR RMDSZ early 1990s Gyorgy Frunda UDMR RMDSZ mid 1990s to late 1990s Sergiu Cunescu PSDR early to mid 1990s Otto Weber PER early to late 1990s Marcian Bleahu FER early to late 1990s As of mid 2023 of all the aforementioned leaders of the CDR only Constantinescu and Frunda are still alive Electoral history editLegislative elections edit Election Chamber Senate Position AftermathVotes Seats Votes Seats1992 2 117 144 19 46 82 341 2 210 722 20 16 34 143 2nd 1 Opposition to PDSR PUNR PRM PSM government 1992 1996 1996 3 692 321 30 17 122 343 3 772 084 30 70 53 143 1st 2 CDR USD UDMR government 1996 2000 2000 546 135 5 04 0 140 575 706 5 29 0 140 6th as CDR 2000 3 Extra parliamentary opposition to PDSR minority government 2000 2004 Notes 1 CDR members in 1992 PNȚCD 21 senators and 41 deputies PAC 7 senators and 13 deputies PNL AT 1 senator and 11 deputies PSDR 1 senator and 10 deputies PNL CD 4 senators and 3 deputies and PER no senators and 4 deputies 2 CDR members in 1996 PNȚCD 25 senators and 81 deputies PNL 22 senators and 28 deputies PNL CD 1 senator and 4 deputies PAR 3 senators and 3 deputies PER 1 senator and 5 deputies and Ecologist Federation of Romania FER 1 senator and 1 deputy 3 CDR 2000 members PNȚCD UFD Ecologist Federation of Romania FER National Christian Democratic Alliance ANCD and The Moldavians Party PM Local elections edit National results edit Election County Councilors CJ Mayors Local Councilors CL Popular vote PositionVotes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats1996 1 667 417 19 53 307 1 718 2 712 852 26 27 355 2 954 1 786 077 19 58 6 525 33 429 2nd Election County Presidents PCJ PositionVotes Seats1992 6 41 2nd 1996 15 41 2nd 2000 1 41 4th Mayor of Bucharest edit Election Candidate First round Second roundVotes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position1996 Victor Ciorbea 39 61 1st 56 74 1st Presidential elections edit Election Candidate First round Second roundVotes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position1992 Emil Constantinescu1 3 717 006 31 1 2nd 4 641 207 38 6 2nd 1996 Emil Constantinescu1 3 569 941 28 2 2nd 7 057 906 54 4 1st 2000 Mugur Isărescu2 1 069 463 9 5 4th not qualifiedNotes 1 Emil Constantinescu was the common centre right candidate who was endorsed by the PNȚCD both in 1992 and 1996 as part of the CDR 2 Mugur Isărescu was endorsed by the PNȚCD at the 2000 elections as part of the re named CDR 2000 alliance Timeline of the political composition of the CDR with all of its constituent parties 1991 2000 editSee also editPolitics of Romania List of political parties in RomaniaReferences edit Radu Campeanu și Niculae Cerveni invitați la Marius Tucă Show Marius Tucă Show Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Retrieved 31 May 2021 Roper Steven D Winter 1997 From Opposition To Government Coalition Unity And Fragmentation Within The Democratic Convention Of Romania East European Quarterly 31 4 519 Bibliography editDan Pavel Iulia Huia lt lt Nu putem reusi decit impreună gt gt O istorie analitică a Convenţiei Democratice 1989 2000 Editura Polirom Iasi 2003 Roper Steven D lt lt From Opposition to Government Coalition Unity and Fragmentation within the Democratic Convention of Romania gt gt East European Quarterly 1997 Vol 31 4 519 542 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Romanian Democratic Convention amp oldid 1173977153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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