fbpx
Wikipedia

Social Democratic Party (Romania)

The Social Democratic Party (Romanian: Partidul Social Democrat, PSD) is the largest social democratic[25][26] political party in Romania and also the largest overall political party in the country, aside from European Parliament level, where it is the second largest by total number of political representatives (i.e. MEPs), after the National Liberal Party (PNL).[27] It was founded by Ion Iliescu, Romania's first democratically elected president at the 1990 Romanian general election.[28][29][30][31][32] It is currently part of the National Coalition for Romania (CNR), which is a big tent grand coalition comprising also the National Liberal Party (PNL). The CNR formerly included the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR/RMDSZ) until mid June 2023.

Social Democratic Party
Partidul Social Democrat
AbbreviationPSD
PresidentMarcel Ciolacu
Secretary-GeneralPaul Stănescu
First-Vice PresidentsGabriela Firea
Sorin Grindeanu
Honorary PresidentIon Iliescu
Leader in the SenateLucian Romașcanu
Leader in the Chamber of DeputiesAlfred Simonis
Leader in the European ParliamentDan Nica
Founded7 April 1992 (1992-04-07) (FDSN)
16 June 2001 (2001-06-16) (merger)
Merger ofPDSR
PSDR
Preceded byDemocratic National Salvation Front
HeadquartersȘoseaua Kiseleff 10,
Bucharest
Youth wingSocial Democratic Youth
Women's wingOFSD
Membership (2015)530,000[needs update]
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left[18][19][20][A]
National affiliationRed Quadrilateral
(1992–1996)
Social Democratic Pole of Romania (2000–2004)
Social Liberal Union
(2011–2014)
Centre Left Alliance
(2012–2014)
National Coalition for Romania (2021–present)
European affiliationParty of European Socialists
International affiliationProgressive Alliance
Socialist International
European Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Colours  Red
Senate
49 / 136
[a][21]
Chamber of Deputies
107 / 330
[b][22]
European Parliament
8 / 33
[23]
Mayors
1,362 / 3,176
[24]
County Presidents
20 / 41
[24]
County Councilors
362 / 1,340
[24]
Local Council Councilors
13,820 / 39,900
[24]
Ministers
9 / 18
[c]
Party flag
Website
psd.ro

  • a. ^ 1 senator from PUSL in PSD parliamentary group
  • b. ^ 4 deputies from PUSL in PSD parliamentary group
  • c. ^ + the current Prime Minister and a Deputy Prime Minister
^ A: The party has also been labelled as catch-all[9]

It is a member of the Progressive Alliance (PA), which was founded in 2013,[33] Socialist International (SI),[34] and Party of European Socialists (PES).[35] As of 2015, the PSD had 530,000 members.[36][needs update]

PSD traces its origins to the Democratic National Salvation Front (FDSN), a breakaway group established in 1992 from the center-left National Salvation Front (FSN) established after 1989. In 1993, this merged with three other parties to become the Party of Social Democracy in Romania (Romanian: Partidul Democrației Sociale in România, PDSR). The present name was adopted after a merger with the smaller Romanian Social Democratic Party (PSDR) in 2001.[37]

Since its formation, it has always been one of the two dominant parties of the country. The PDSR governed Romania from 1992 to 1996, while the PSDR was a junior coalition partner between 1996 and 2000. The merged PSD was the senior party in the coalitions governing from 2000 to 2004, and from March 2014 to November 2015, as well as one of the main coalition partners between December 2008 and October 2009 (with the Democratic Liberal Party, PDL) and again between May 2012 and March 2014 (as part of the Social Liberal Union, USL). PSD left government after former Prime Minister, Victor Ponta resigned in November 2015, only for PSD to return as the senior governing party in January 2017, shortly after it achieved a major victory in the 2016 Romanian legislative election. The party remained in power at governmental level until 2019, before being voted down in the parliament and then endorsing a PNL minority government between 2019 and 2020. Subsequently, it entered opposition between 2020 and 2021, before eventually returning to government within the CNR coalition in late 2021.

Party founder Ion Iliescu is the only PSD candidate to become President of Romania, he served in office from the 1989 to 1996, and again from 2000 to 2004.

Currently, PSD is the largest party in the Parliament of Romania with initially 47 seats in the Senate of Romania and 110 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (as obtained at the 2020 Romanian legislative election), it also has the largest number of mayors, as well as the second largest number of local and county councillors and county presidents (after PNL), remaining the biggest and most influential political force in the country to the present day.[38][39]

History edit

Following the 27–29 May 1992 Convention of the National Salvation Front (Romanian: Frontul Salvării Naționale, FSN) when Petre Roman became President of the Party, former Party Leader Ion Iliescu and his group of supporters withdraw from FSN and founded the Democratic National Salvation Front (Romanian: Frontul Democrat al Salvării Naționale, FDSN) while the rest of FSN was renamed as the Democratic Party (Romanian: Partidul Democrat) in May 1993.[40]

During its first National Conference on the 28th of June 1992, FDSN decided on endorsing Ion Iliescu in the 1992 Romanian general election,[41] which they later won and went on to govern Romania until 1996.[37] On 10 July 1993, it took the name of Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR) upon merger with the Socialist Democratic Party of Romania, the Republican Party, and the Cooperative Party.[42][37]

 
The logo of the Party of Social Democracy in Romania

From 1992 to 1996, the PDSR ruled in coalition with the Romanian National Unity Party (PUNR) and Greater Romania Party (PRM), and the left-wing Socialist Party of Labour (PSM), nicknemed by the Press as the Red Quadrilateral. The PUNR had ministers in the cabinet chaired by Nicolae Văcăroiu from March 1992 to September 1996. The PRM was not present at the cabinet-level but was given some posts in the state administration but which it retracted when it left the coalition in 1995.[43]

PDSR went into opposition after the 1996 Romanian general election, which was won by the right-wing coalition Romanian Democratic Convention (CDR).[citation needed]

After four years of governmental turmoil and economic downfall, poorly managed by the crumbling CDR, saw PDSR making a fulminant comeback, winning the 2000 Romanian general election, this time in a coalition named the Social Democratic Pole of Romania (PDSR) along with the Romanian Social Democratic Party (PSDR) and the Romanian Humanist Party (PUR). The PSDR merged with PDSR on 16 June 2001, and the resulting party took the PSD name.

 
The former blue and white PSD logo, used between 2001 and 2006

In November 2004, Adrian Năstase, the PSD candidate and incumbent Prime Minister of Romania, won the first round of the presidential elections but did not have a majority and had to go to a second round of voting, which he narrowly lost to Traian Băsescu of the opposition Justice and Truth Alliance (DA), who became Romania's 4th president. In the 2004 Romanian general election, the PSD gained the largest share of the vote but because it did not have a majority, the other parties that managed to enter parliament, UDMR/RMDSZ and PUR, abandoned their respective pre-electoral agreements with the PSD and joined the Justice and Truth Alliance (DA), mainly at the pressure of Băsescu. Mircea Geoană was elected president of the party in April 2005 by delegates at a PSD Party Congress held in Bucharest. His victory represented a surprise defeat for Iliescu, who was expected to defeat Geoană with ease. On 17 April 2008, the PSD and the PC announced they would form a political alliance for the 2008 Romanian local elections.[44]

In February 2010, the Congress elected Victor Ponta as president after Geoană lost the 2009 Romanian presidential election. On 5 February 2011, the PSD formed a political alliance known as the Social Liberal Union (USL) with the PC and the National Liberal Party (PNL).[45] The USL was disbanded on 25 February 2014 with exit of the PNL, which entered the opposition.[46]

In July 2015, Liviu Dragnea was elected by the Congress of the PSD as the new president of the party, with 97% of the votes from the members. He was elected as leader after the former prime minister Victor Ponta stepped down on 12 July 2015 following charges of corruption that were later dropped. On 12 April 2019, the PSD was suspended from the Party of European Socialists (PES) following concerns about judicial reforms of the Dăncilă Cabinet.[47] In May 2019, after Liviu Dragnea's jailing, Viorica Dăncilă was elected by the Congress of the PSD as the new president of the party.

After being ousted from power in October 2019, the PSD also lost the 2019 Romanian presidential election. Such decline sent shockwase across the European Union (EU), especially the PES, as it resulted in their loss of power within von der Leyen Commission. Nonetheless, Daniel Hegedüs posited that this could be a win for both the PES and the wider European left, as the PES would regain credibility because "mounting authoritarianism in Hungary and Poland has suffered under the burden of PSD's rule-of-law record". In addition, Hegedüs noted the fact that this could represent another chance for the PSD to reform itself and change its ways.[48]

In August 2020, Marcel Ciolacu became president of the party (after having previously served for this position only as ad interim between November 2019 and August 2020).[49] During the same month, the PSD was willing to vote a motion of no confidence against the second Orban cabinet.[38] Shortly after December 2020, while still the largest party in the wake of the 2020 Romanian legislative election, the PSD suffered significant political capital losses (as they previously did in the 2020 Romanian local elections as well) given the chaotic and negative governmental activity the party was responsible for during the former legislature (more specifically during the years 2017 and 2019), yet remained the biggest parliamentary opposition well up until the end of 2021.

During the 2021 Romanian political crisis, the PSD was again willing to have such a vote, this time against the Cîțu Cabinet,[50] which it subsequently did,[51] thereby contributing to its final dismissal.[39] In November 2021, successful negotiations with the PNL led the PSD closer to returning government in the incumbent Ciucă Cabinet within a grand coalition government known as the National Coalition for Romania (or CNR for short).[52] The PSD is still governing Romania as of early 2022, albeit with major tensions in the said grand coalition. The coalition has been described as authoritarian conservative.[53][54]

In November 2022, the PSD agreed with the Moldovan European Social Democratic Party (PSDE) to begin a strategic partnership.[55]

Predecessors and successors edit

 
Flowchart denoting the political evolution of PSD, from its origins in the FSN in 1990 until the year 2010, with political groups which were both integrated and seceded from the party throughout the passing of time.

Party splits edit

Absorbed parties edit

Notes

1 After the merger, the party changed its name from the Democratic National Salvation Front (FDSN) to the Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR).

2 After the merger, the party changed its name from the Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR) to the Social Democratic Party (PSD).

Ideology and platform edit

Like its counterpart national-level members of the Party of European Socialists (PES), the PSD has a centre-left outlook and has been described as governing as centre-left,[56][57][58] but has also been described as pragmatic,[9] owing to its syncretic politics.[9][5] The PSD was formed as a result of the merger of the Romanian Social Democratic Party (PSDR), which had an internationalist social-democratic ideology, with the Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR), whose governance was marked by a combination of social democracy, democratic socialism, labourism, pragmatism, left-wing populism, and nationalism.[59] The 2003 absorption of the Socialist Party of Labour (PSM) and the Socialist Party of the National Renaissance (PSRN) led to the strengthening of the left-wing nationalism component within the party.[60][61] Until 2021[62][63][64][65] unlike the majority of Western European PES party members and as other like-minded centre-left, social democratic parties in Central and Eastern European post-Communism, it has taken a more soft Eurosceptic[62] outlook,[64][65][66] though it is neutral in regards to European integration.[67] PSD stated that it endorses EU and NATO membership.[68][69][70][71][72] The party is more conservative than PES when it comes to social issues,[11][73][74] reflecting the country's social-conservative outlook,[75] including in its centre-right counterpart, the National Liberal Party (PNL).[10] It has been described as a left-wing nationalist[5][76][6] and left-wing populist[77][7][8] social democratic party.[10][78][79]

The party has been described as having centre-left rhetoric and economic policies, while being more conservative on personal and ethical matters. According to Florin Poenaru, "the movement led by Ion Iliescu was from the very beginning the party of local capitalists and not of the industrial proletariat. ... PSD was the party that aggregated the interests of the autochthonous capitalists, but whose electoral basis was the former industrial proletariat."[80] Poenaru states that PSD never said no to the neoliberal agenda but applied it rather slowly.[80] Andrei Pleșu once stated that the main post-Communist Romanian parties do not act according to some ideology or doctrine.[81]

Political analyst Radu Magdin said that the PSD is "a catch-all party: its values are conservative, its economic policy is liberal and it has a social, left-leaning rhetoric when it comes to public policies." An example is their calls for both tax cuts and pensions and wages increase in 2016.[9] Its more conservative outlook is owed to the social-conservative nature of post-Communist countries, and has been adopted by both the centre-left (PSD) and the centre-right (PNL).[82] For Cornel Ban, Assistant Professor of International Relations at the Pardee School of Boston University, the PSD is an anomaly in Eastern Europe in that it was an ideal playground for right-wing populist parties but has seen the political left routinely win; this was in part because the political right and far-right were in government, including at the local level, during the post-Communist slumps which remained in the mind of many voters.[10] Journalist Jean-Baptiste Chastand said that the PSD-led pro-European government in Romania took a national conservative turn.[83] The historian Ioan Stanomir stated that PSD is a conservative party, that has nothing to do with the left,[84] while journalist Bogdan Tiberiu Iacob described the party as progressive-conservative.[68] PSD also opposed the mandatory refugee quotas.[85][86][87] Journalist Daniel Mihăilescu labeled the party as national populist.[88] Deutsche Welle stated that, unlike most European Social-democratic parties, PSD is against social progressivism and is strongly conservative.[89] Journalist and philosipher Andrei Cornea also stated that PSD is not a social-democratic party, but a patrimonial-conservative one, structured around vassalism and clientelism, whose essential electoral pool is formed by a poor, ignorant and especially devoid of civic conscience.[90]

In regards to LGBT rights, in general, PSD opposes the recognition of same-sex marriages and civil partnerships. However, in 2018, then PSD president Liviu Dragnea hinted that PSD could support the recognition the civil partnership.[91][92][93] Also, in January 2001, it was the PSD-dominated Adrian Năstase's government that adopted the Emergency Ordinance no. 89/2001,[94] which eliminated Art. 200 of the Penal Code and adjusted other articles referring to sex offences to avoid discriminatory treatment of offenders, thus legalising same-sex relations.[95] This ordinance came into force in January 2002, after President Ion Iliescu (the founder of PSD) signed the new law.[96] However, the current president of the Social Democrats, Marcel Ciolacu, is a strong opponent to the recognition of same-sex marriage and the civil partnership.[97][98]

The party has strong connections with the Romanian Orthodox Church (BOR), reflecting the party's social conservatism.[99][100][101][102][103]

Structure edit

President edit

The president of the party conducts the general activity of the party, the activity of the National Executive Committee and the National Permanent Bureau and responds to the Congress on the general work of the PSD. The president is elected by secret vote by the Congress for a four-year mandate and represents the party in the Romanian society, in relations with the central and local public authorities, as well as with other parties or organizations in the country or abroad.

Honorary President edit

PSD Honorary President is nominated by Congress for the four-year mandate of the party's recognized personalities. The Honorary President of the PSD participates with the right to vote in the work of the national governing bodies.

Secretary-General edit

The Secretary-General manages the functional services at the central level and the relationship with the county and Bucharest organizations. It coordinates the Executive Secretariat of the PSD with 7 to 9 executive secretaries. Executive secretaries shall be appointed by the National Executive Committee, on a proposal from the chair, after consulting the Secretary-General.

Permanent National Bureau edit

The Permanent National Bureau is the operative body for analyzing and deciding the party. It has the following composition: PSD President, PSD Honorary President, PSD Secretary General, PSD Deputy Chairpersons. At the National Permanent Bureau, the chairman of the National Council, the leaders of the parliamentary groups, the presidents of women and youth organizations, the treasurer, the director of the Social Democratic Institute, the representative of the county administrative council presidents, the mayors of municipalities and the representative of the National League of Mayors and PSD Councilors participate. The National Permanent Bureau meets weekly, usually Monday.

The Permanent National Bureau have the following duties:

  • To organize and direct the entire activity of the party according to the decisions adopted as appropriate by the Congress, the National Council, and the National Executive Committee.
  • Drafts draft decisions that it submits to the debate and adoption of the National Executive Committee.
  • Orientates the work of parliamentary groups.
  • Establishes and coordinates working committees on doctrine, electoral programs, and strategies.
  • Establishes and co-ordinates political analysis groups of the economic, social, domestic and international situation.
  • Manages the party's patrimony.

National Executive Committee edit

Coordinates the entire activity of the party between the meetings of the National Council. The PSD National Executive Committee analyzes, debates and decides on the fundamental issues of the Party's work on: the program, the electoral strategy, the political and electoral alliances, the governing program, the structure and the nominal composition of the Government, the validation of the party's preliminary election for the nomination of candidates for senators, MEPs, MEPs, and elected local, merging by absorption or merging with other parties; PSD collaboration agreements with trade unions and employers' confederations; the strategy of selecting, preparing, training and promoting the party's human resources, organizing and conducting internal party choices, coordinating the activities of the Youth Organization and the Women's Organization.

The adopted decisions are validated by the National Council. The National Executive Committee consists of PSD President, PSD Honorary President, PSD Secretary General, PSD Vice Presidents, President of the National Council, Presidents of County Organizations, Sectors and the Bucharest Municipality Organization, the President of the Women's Organization and the President of the Youth Organization.

National Council edit

 
Adrian Năstase during a meeting of the National Council in November 2013

The National Council is the governing body of the party in the interval between two congresses. It consists of a maximum of 751 members elected from the candidates nominated by the County and Bucharest Conferences, or proposed by the Congress. The National Council elects and revokes by secret vote the President of the National Council and the treasurer, validates the composition of the National Executive Committee and The Permanent National Bureau; decides to conclude political alliances as well as merge by merging or absorbing with other political parties or political parties; to hear the activity reports submitted by members of the Permanent National Bureau, by the Chairman of the Commission for Arbitration and Moral Integrity, by the President of the National Commission for Financial Control and Treasurer and decides accordingly on the basis of the mandate given by the Congress, according to the provisions of the Statute; is responsible for organizing presidential, parliamentary, euro-parliamentary and local electoral campaigns; analyzes the work of parliamentary groups, women's and youth organizations, the National League of Mayors and PSD Councilors; validates the decisions of the National Executive Committee on the Governance Program and confirms the proposals of members of the Government; resolve the appeals lodged against the decisions of the councils of the county organizations or of the Bucharest municipality; resolves the divergences between the Councils of the County Organizations, respectively the Bucharest Municipality Organization and the National Executive Committee in connection with the nomination of the candidates for the legislative elections, if they persist; approves the party's annual revenue and expenditure budget, decides on its execution.

The PSD National Council meets annually and whenever needed. Deputies, senators and MEPs who are not members of the National Council participate in its meetings without the right to vote. The National Council may decide, on a proposal from the Permanent National Bureau, to organize forums, leagues, associations, clubs and other such bodies for the promotion of strategies in the PSD Political Program, in the Romanian society and in partnership with the trade unions. The party-union relationship as well as the concrete ways of collaboration will be established by the National Permanent Bureau. Within the PSD there are: the National Workers' Forum; National Farmers Forum; National Ecologists' Forum; The National Forum of Scientists, Culture and Art and the Pensioners' League. In order to develop PSD programs and strategies in the field of party life, consultative councils can be set up on: political analysis, image and relations with the media; organization and human resources. The Consultative Council for the Problems of National Minorities of the PSD carries out activities to identify the specific problems faced by national minorities in Romania and develops appropriate solutions and proposals for their resolution.

Congress edit

The supreme governing party of the Social Democratic Party is the Congress, which is convened every four years or in extraordinary cases. The PSD Congress is made up of elected delegates by secret ballot by the County Conferences and the Bucharest Municipality and has the following attributions: adopting or modifying the PSD Statute and the Political Program of the Party; sets out the party's guidelines, strategy and tactics for the period between two congresses; elects the party chairman, the vice-presidents, the general secretary, the other members of the National Council, the National Commission for Arbitration and Moral Integrity and the National Commission for Financial Control; appoints the PSD candidate to the position of President of Romania and the Prime Minister in the event of winning the elections; resolves possible appeals against decisions of other PSD central bodies.

Party leadership edit

  Also served as President of Romania
  Also served as Prime Minister
  Also served as Chamber President
  Also served as Senate President
Name
Birth–Death
Portrait Term start Term end Duration
1 Ion Iliescu
(1930–)
  7 April 1992 11 October 1992 6 months and 4 days
2 Oliviu Gherman
(1930–2020)
11 October 1992 January 1997 c. 4 years and 2 months
(1) Ion Iliescu
(1930–)
  January 1997 20 December 2000 c. 4 years
3 Adrian Năstase1
(1950– )
  20 December 2000 21 January 2005 4 years, 1 month and 1 day
4 Mircea Geoană
(1958–
  2005 2010 c. 5 years
5 Victor Ponta
(1972–
  21 February 2010 12 July 2015 5 years, 4 months and 21 days
Rovana Plumb
(acting)
(1960–
  24 June 2015 22 July 2015 28 days
Liviu Dragnea
(acting)
(1962– )
  22 July 2015 12 October 2015 2 months and 20 days
6 Liviu Dragnea
(1962– )
  12 October 2015 27 May 2019 3 years, 7 months and 15 days
7 Viorica Dăncilă
(1963–
  27 May 2019 26 November 2019 5 months and 30 days
Marcel Ciolacu
(acting)
(1967–
  26 November 2019 22 August 2020 8 months and 27 days
8 Marcel Ciolacu
(1967–
  22 August 2020 Incumbent 3 years, 8 months and 4 days
Notes

1 Năstase served twice as Chamber President, the first term from March 1992 to May 1996, while the second from December 2004 to March 2006.

Presidents edit

Executive presidents edit

Notable members edit

Current notable members edit

Former notable members edit

Electoral history edit

Legislative elections edit

Year Chamber Senate Position Aftermath
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
1992 3,015,708 27.72
117 / 341
3,102,201 28.29
49 / 143
 1st 
(as FDSN)
PDSR-PUNR-PRM-PSM government (1992–1996)
1996 2,633,860 21.52
91 / 343
2,836,011 23.08
41 / 143
 2nd 
(as PDSR)
Opposition to CDR-USD-UDMR government (1996–2000)
2000 3,968,464 36.61
139 / 345
4,040,212 37.09
59 / 140
 1st 
(within PDSR)1
PDSR minority government (2000–2004)
2004 3,730,352 36.61
113 / 332
3,798,607 36.30
46 / 137
 1st 
(within PSD+PUR)2
Opposition to DA-PUR3-UDMR government (2004–2007)
Endorsing PNL-UDMR minority government (2007–2008)
2008 2,279,449 33.10
110 / 334
2,352,968 34.16
48 / 137
 2nd 
(within PSD+PC)4
PDL-PSD government (2008–2009)
Opposition to PDL-UNPR-UDMR government (2009–2012)
USL government (2012)
2012 4,344,288 58.63
149 / 412
4,457,526 60.10
58 / 176
 1st 
(within USL)5
USL government (2012–2014)
PSD-UNPR-UDMR-PC government (2014)
PSD-UNPR-ALDE government (2014–2015)
Endorsing the technocratic Cioloș Cabinet (2015–2017)
2016 3,204,864 45.48
154 / 329
3,221,786 45.68
67 / 136
 1st  PSD-ALDE government (2017–2019)
PSD minority government (2019)
Endorsing PNL minority government (2019–2020)
Opposition to PNL minority government (2020)
2020 1,705,777 28.90
110 / 330
1,732,276 29.32
47 / 136
 1st  Opposition to PNL-USR PLUS-UDMR government (2020–2021)
Opposition to PNL-UDMR minority government (2021)
CNR government (2021–present)
2024 TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD
Notes

1 Social Democratic Pole of Romania members: PDSR, PSDR (2 senators and 10 deputies), and PUR (4 senators and 6 deputies).

2 National Union PSD+PUR members: PSD and PUR (11 senators and 19 deputies).

3 Soon after the elections, PUR broke the alliance with the PSD and switched sides, joining the government led by the Justice and Truth Alliance (DA).

4 Alliance PSD+PC members: PSD and PC (1 senator and 4 deputies).

5 The Social Liberal Union (USL) was an alliance consisting of two smaller alliances, more specifically the Centre Left Alliance (ACS) and the Centre Right Alliance (ACD). The members of the Centre Left Alliance (ACS) were the PSD and the UNPR (5 senators and 10 deputies) whereas the members of the Centre Right Alliance (ACD) were the PNL (50 senators and 100 deputies) and the PC (8 senators and 13 deputies).

Local elections edit

Year County councilors Mayors Local councilors Popular vote % Position
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
1996 1,390,225 16.28
290 / 1,718
2,713,095 26.28
928 / 2,954
1,716,899 18.82
9,483 / 33,429
 1st 
2000 2,241,930 27.4
496 / 1,718
2,416,598 27.4
1,050 / 2,954
2,197,719 25.8
11,380 / 39,718
 1st 
2004 2,957,617 32.70
543 / 1,436
3,908,895 41.83
1,702 / 3,137
2,951,226 31.88
14,990 / 40,031
 1st 
2008 2,337,102 27.97
452 / 1,393
2,717,490 30.77
1,138 / 3,179
2,268,271 26.67
12,137 / 40,297
 2nd 
2012 4,203,007 49.68
723 / 1,338
2,782,792 33.99
1,292 / 3,121
2,630,123 32.74
12,668 / 39,121
 1st 
(as USL)
2016 3,270,909 39.60
638 / 1,434
3,330,213 38.98
1,708 / 3,186
3,161,046 37.70
16,969 / 40,067
 1st 
2020 1,605,721 22.32
362 / 1,340
2,262,791 30.34
1,362 / 3,176
2,090,777 28.40
13,820 / 39,900
 2nd 
2024 TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD
Year County presidents Position
Votes % Seats
1992
30 / 41
 1st 
(as FSN)
1996
17 / 41
 1st 
2000
29 / 41
 1st 
2004
19 / 41
 1st 
2008 2,234,465 28.06
17 / 41
 1st 
2012 4,260,709 49.71
22 / 41
 1st 
(within USL)
2016
28 / 41
 1st 
2020 1,663,399 22.86
20 / 41
 1st 
2024 TBD TBD TBD TBD

County council elections edit

Election County Percentage Councillors +/- Aftermath
2020 Alba 16.61%
6 / 32
  3 Opposition
2020 Arad 9.89%
3 / 32
  8 Opposition
2020 Argeș 44.78%
17 / 34
  3 PSD minority
2020 Bacău 42.25%
17 / 36
  PSD
2020 Bihor 15.54%
6 / 34
  3 Opposition
2020 Bistrița-Năsăud 40.62%
14 / 30
  3 PSD-PMP
2020 Botoșani 40.13%
15 / 32
  3 PSD
2020 Brăila 47.97%
17 / 30
  3 PSD majority
2020 Brașov 19.35%
8 / 34
  3 Opposition
2020 Bucharest 32.38%
21 / 55
  3 Opposition
2020 Buzău 57.68%
21 / 32
  1 PSD majority
2020 Călărași 45.09%
15 / 30
  3 PSD minority
2020 Caraș-Severin 27.51%
10 / 30
  4 PSD-PMP
2020 Cluj 13.32%
5 / 36
  7 Opposition
2020 Constanța 23.01%
10 / 36
  6 Opposition
2020 Covasna 5.73%
2 / 30
  1 Opposition
2020 Dâmbovița 43.66%
17 / 34
  5 PSD majority
2020 Dolj 39.66%
16 / 36
  9 PSD-PRO-PER
2020 Galați 39.73%
17 / 34
  2 PSD majority
2020 Giurgiu 33.20%
12 / 30
  8 Opposition
2020 Gorj 42.95%
16 / 32
  PSD majority
2020 Harghita 7.76%
3 / 30
  Opposition
2020 Hunedoara 43.80%
17 / 32
  1 PSD majority
2020 Ialomița 37.27%
14 / 30
  4 PSD-PNL
2020 Iași 24.49%
10 / 36
  7 Opposition
2020 Ilfov 12.81%
5 / 32
  7 Opposition
2020 Maramureș 25.14%
10 / 34
  9 Opposition
2020 Mehedinți 45.58%
15 / 30
  3 PSD majority
2020 Mureș 17.87%
7 / 34
  3 Opposition
2020 Neamț 35.76%
13 / 34
  4 Opposition
2020 Olt 54.44%
21 / 32
  2 PSD majority
2020 Prahova 31.59%
11 / 36
  5 Opposition
2020 Sălaj 27.89%
10 / 30
  2 Opposition
2020 Satu Mare 14.00%
5 / 32
  4 Opposition
UDMR-PSD-PMP
2020 Sibiu 13.90%
5 / 32
  7 Opposition
2020 Suceava 30.47%
13 / 36
  3 Opposition
2020 Teleorman 39.37%
15 / 32
  3 Opposition
2020 Timiș 15.02%
7 / 36
  9 Opposition
2020 Tulcea 34.35%
12 / 30
  2 Opposition
2020 Vâlcea 41.69%
16 / 32
  2 PSD-PER
2020 Vaslui 39.11%
14 / 34
  6 PSD
2020 Vrancea 41.91%
15 / 32
  3 PSD

Mayor of Bucharest elections edit

Year Candidate First round Second round
Votes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position
1996 Ilie Năstase
30.38%
 2nd 
43.26%
 2nd 
2000 Sorin Oprescu 260,689
41.16%
 1st  353,038
49.31%
 2nd 
2004 Mircea Geoană 225,774
29.74%
 2nd 
2008 Cristian Diaconescu 67,251
12.33%
 3rd  not qualified
2012 Sorin Oprescu1 430,512
53.79%
 1st 
2016 Gabriela Firea 246,553
42.97%
 1st 
2020 Gabriela Firea 250,690
37.97%
 2nd 
2024 Gabriela Firea TBD TBD TBD
Notes

1 Independent candidate endorsed by the USL

Presidential elections edit

Year Candidate First round Second round
Votes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position
1990 Ion Iliescu 12,232,498
85.0%
 1st 
1992 Ion Iliescu 5,633,465
47.5%
 1st  7,393,429
61.4%
 1st 
1996 Ion Iliescu 4,081,093
32.3%
 1st  5,914,579
45.6%
 2nd 
2000 Ion Iliescu 4,076,273
36.4%
 1st  6,696,623
66.8%
 1st 
2004 Adrian Năstase 4,278,864
40.9%
 1st  4,881,520
48.8%
 2nd 
2009 Mircea Geoană 3,027,838
31.1%
 2nd  5,205,760
49.7%
 2nd 
2014 Victor Ponta 3,836,093
40.4%
 1st  5,264,383
45.6%
 2nd 
2019 Viorica Dăncilă 2,051,725
22.3%
 2nd  3,339,922
33.9%
 2nd 
2024 TBA TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD

European Parliament elections edit

Year Votes % MEPs Position EU party EP group
Jan. 2007 34.28  
12 / 35
 
 1st    PES S&D
Nov. 2007 1,184,018   23.11  
10 / 35
 
 2nd    PES S&D
2009 1,504,218   31.07  
10 / 33
 
 1st 
(within PSD+PC)1  
PES S&D
2014 2,093,237   37.60  
12 / 32
 
 1st 
(within USD)2  
PES S&D
2019 2,040,765   22.51  
9 / 32
 
 2nd    PES S&D
2024 TBD TBD TBD TBD PES S&D
Notes

1 Alliance PSD+PC members: PSD and PC (1 MEP).

2 Social Democratic Union (USD) members: PSD, PC (2 MEPs), and UNPR (2 MEPs).

Controversies edit

Political opponents have criticised PSD for harbouring former Romanian Communist Party (PCR) officials, and for allegedly attempting to control the Romanian mass media. By 2009, a number of its incumbent or former senior members have also been accused of corruption, interfering in the judiciary and using their political positions for personal enrichment.[104] As of 2015, founding member Ion Iliescu is facing prosecution on charges of crimes against humanity for his role in the June 1990 Mineriad,[105] while former president Liviu Dragnea was convicted for electoral fraud and for instigation to the abuse of public office and being indicted for forming an "organised criminal group" in 2018.[106] That same year, former president Victor Ponta had also been investigated for corruption but was ultimately acquitted.[107] Adrian Năstase temporarily self-suspended himself from the position on 16 January 2006, pending investigation of a scandal provoked by his wealth declaration, where he was accused of corruption.[108] Alleged text transcripts of PSD meetings surfaced on an anonymous website just before the 2004 Romanian general election. Năstase and his ministers are shown talking about political involvement in corruption trials of the government's members, or involvement in suppressing "disobedient" media. Năstase stated that the transcripts were fake, but several party members, including former PSD president and former foreign minister Mircea Geoană, have said they are genuine, though Geoană later retracted his statement.[109] Security expert Iulian Fota stated that PSD is a neocommunist anti-Western party backed by Russia.[110]

Politicians of the party have occasionally employed "utilitarian anti-Semitism", meaning that politicians who may usually not be antisemites played off certain antisemitic prejudices in order to serve their political necessities.[111] On 5 March 2012, PSD Senator Dan Șova, at that time the party spokesman, said on The Money Channel that "no Jew suffered on Romanian territory, thanks to marshal Antonescu."[112] Elie Wiesel National Institute for Studying the Holocaust in Romania expressed its deep disagreement and indignation over the statements of the spokesman of the party.[113] Following public outcry, Șova retracted his statement and issued a public apology; nevertheless, the chairman of the party, Victor Ponta, announced his removal from the office of party spokesman.[114]

Between 2017 and 2019, the party, along with its former junior coalition partners, more specifically the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats (ALDE) and the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR/RMDSZ), had unsuccessfully tried to pass a series of tremendously controversial laws related to the judicial system. In a 2018 preliminary opinion, the Venice Commission stated that the changes could severely undermine the independence of judges and prosecutors in Romania.[115] This unsuccessful endeavour committed by the former PSD–ALDE coalition was the basis for the nationwide 2017–2019 Romanian protests,[116] the largest in the country's entire history thus far.[117]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Some argue that, in practice, the Social Democratic Party has little in common with social democracy, despite the party's official stance.[2][3]

References edit

  1. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2020). "Parties and Elections in Europe". Parties and Elections in Europe. from the original on 14 February 2018. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  2. ^ https://revista22.ro/opinii/andrei-cornea/este-psd-un-partid-social-democrat
  3. ^ https://www.dw.com/ro/deputat-german-psd-nu-este-un-partid-social-democrat/a-46422145
  4. ^ "Rumänien führt "Steuer gegen Gier" ein". Deutsche Welle. 22 December 2018. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  5. ^ a b c Leiße, Olaf; Leiße, Utta-Kristin; Richter, Alexander (2013) [2004]. "3.3 Parteien und politische Entwicklung". Beitrittsbarometer Rumänien. Grundprobleme des Landes und Einstellungen rumänischer Jugendlicher auf dem Weg in die Europäische Union (in German). Wiesbaden: Deutscher UniversitätsVerlag. p. 51. ISBN 978-3322813206.
  6. ^ a b c Mihăilescu, Daniel (2019). "Rumänien startet EU-Ratsvorsitz mit neuer Attacke gegen Justizsystem". Die Presse. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  7. ^ a b Krökel, Ulrich (10 March 2017). "Aufgefallen: Der stille Anführer". Publik-Forum.de (in German). Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  8. ^ a b Beichelt, Timm (2013) [2001]. "6.1.1 Strukturelle Kontextbindungen". Demokratische Konsolidierung im postsozialistischen Europa: Die Rolle der politischen Institutionen (in German). Springer-Verlag. p. 299. ISBN 978-3322813206.
  9. ^ a b c d e Păun, Carmen (13 December 2016). "Pragmatism is a winner for Romanian Left". Politico. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d Ban, Cornel (12 December 2016). "Romania: a social democratic anomaly in eastern Europe?". openDemocracy. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  11. ^ a b Dąborowski, Tomasz (14 December 2016). "The Social Democrats' triumph in Romania". OSW. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  12. ^ "Marcel Ciolacu vrea Bac la Religie: România - una dintre cele mai sigure și tolerante țări din lume".
  13. ^ "PSD va susține în Parlament ca Religia să fie materie la bac. Ciolacu: Ce anume ne deranjează? Suntem creștini". 17 March 2023.
  14. ^ "Marcel Ciolacu, despre Religia ca materie de Bacalaureat: Suntem creştini, ne-am crescut copiii în valorile creştine". 17 March 2023.
  15. ^ "Ciolacu: Aș vrea o tendință mai mare către un patriotism economic în următorul program de guvernare". 26 March 2023.
  16. ^ "Marcel Ciolacu explică ce este "patriotismul economic" propus de PSD". 27 March 2023.
  17. ^ "Romanian Social Democrats to pursue "economic patriotism"". 20 March 2023.
  18. ^ "Romania: Parties at a glance".
  19. ^ "PARTIDUL SOCIAL-DEMOCRAT (P.S.D.)".
  20. ^ "PSD si UNPR vor forma o alianta politica de centru-stanga".
  21. ^ "Grupuri parlamentare, Senatul României" [Parliamentary groups, Romanian Senate]. Senat (in Romanian). Senate of Romania. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  22. ^ "Camera Deputaţilor, legislatura 2020–prezent" [Chamber of Deputies, 2020–present legislature]. CDEP (in Romanian). Chamber of Deputies of Romania. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  23. ^ "2019 European election results". European Parliament. 23 October 2019. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  24. ^ a b c d "Rezultate finale 27 Septembrie 2020" [Final results 27 September 2020] (in Romanian). Central Election Bureau of Romania. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  25. ^ Almeida, Dimitri (2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. CRC Press. p. 71. ISBN 9781136340390. Retrieved 2 November 2021 – via Google Books.
  26. ^ "Romania – Political parties". European Election Database. Norwegian Centre for Research Data. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  27. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (December 2020). "Parties and Elections in Europe". Parties and Elections in Europe. from the original on 7 October 2021. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  28. ^ Hogea, Alina. "Coming to Terms with the Communist Past in Romania: An Analysis of the Political and Media Discourse Concerning the Tismăneanu Report". Studies of Transition States and Societies. 2: 16–30.
  29. ^ Tismăneanu, Vladimir (7 July 2011). "225. Romania's First Post-Communist Decade: From Iliescu to Iliescu". Wilson Center. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  30. ^ Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (13 October 2008). "Romania Clears Ex-President Of Murder Charges". RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  31. ^ "Ion Iliescu: Romania's ex-leader charged with crimes against humanity". BBC News. 8 April 2019. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  32. ^ "Dosarul Revoluției, în care Ion Iliescu e acuzat de infracțiuni împotriva umanității, a fost restituit de ÎCCJ la Parchetul Militar". www.digi24.ro (in Romanian). No. 22 June 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  33. ^ "Parties & Organisations". Progressive Alliance. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  34. ^ "Full list of member parties and organisations". Socialist International. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 December 2019. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  36. ^ "Alegeri cu un singur candidat. 530.000 de membri PSD sunt așteptați la urne". 10 October 2015.
  37. ^ a b c "Partidul Social Democrat - Partide - Politica Românească". www.politicaromaneasca.ro. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  38. ^ a b Necșuțu, Mădălin (28 August 2020). "Romanian Government to be Tested by No-Confidence Motion". Balkan Insight. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  39. ^ a b Necșuțu, Mădălin (5 October 2021). "Romanian Government Ousted by No-Confidence Vote". Balkan Insight. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  40. ^ "După '90 | FSN devine Partidul Democrat". dupa90.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  41. ^ "După '90 | Convenția FDSN". dupa90.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  42. ^ "După '90 | Conferința Națională a Frontului Democrat al Salvării Naționale". dupa90.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  43. ^ Arhiva, de (27 September 2017). "Un sfert de secol de la alegerile care au adus la Guvernare "patrulaterul roşu". POVESTEA UNEI FOTOGRAFII". evz.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  44. ^ . setimes.com. 17 April 2008. Archived from the original on 7 June 2008. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  45. ^ Zhang (6 February 2011). "Romanian Oppositions Form Alliance". CRIENGLISH. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  46. ^ Bivol, Alex (25 February 2014). "Romania's Liberals to leave ruling coalition, government". The Sofia Globe. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  47. ^ "European Socialists freeze relations with Romanian ruling party". Romania Insider. 12 April 2019. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  48. ^ Hegedüs, Daniel (2 December 2019). "Loss for Romania's Social Democrats Is a Win for Europe's Left". Balkan Insight. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  49. ^ Stroe, Daniel (24 August 2020). . Independent Balkan News Agency. Archived from the original on 5 November 2021. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  50. ^ "PSD, mesaj pentru USR PLUS: puteți bate câmpii oricât, vom vota orice moțiune de cenzură" [PSD, message for USR PLUS: you can beat the plains no matter how much, we will vote any no confidence motion]. Digi24 (in Romanian). 3 September 2021. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  51. ^ "Romania's centrist PM faces no-confidence vote on Oct. 5". Reuters. 28 September 2021. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  52. ^ Duțulescu, Adriana (4 November 2021). "Surse: Ce au discutat liderii PNL și PSD și cum au ajuns aproape să bată palma pentru o guvernare de 7 ani" [Sources: What the PNL and PSD leaders discussed and how they came close for a 7-year government agreement]. Digi24 (in Romanian). Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  53. ^ "PNL și PSD împing România către un regim autoritar. Amendamentul surpriză din legea anti-ONG, folosit împotriva presei. "Ne ducem într-o direcție foarte periculoasă"". 20 February 2023.
  54. ^ "Degradare accelerată și fără precedent a democrației în regimul Iohannis-Ciucă. România e redusă la tăcere, PNL se PSD-izează rapid". 29 June 2022.
  55. ^ "PDM-ul lui Plahotniuc a ajuns PSDE. Ciolacu:"Aici este resursa cea mai importantă care face puntea dintre DVS și români"". 21 November 2022.
  56. ^ "Președintele PSD Liviu Dragnea: "PSD este cel mai mare partid de stânga din Europa. Se dorește o contraofensivă la Ungaria cu o țară unde guvernul e de stânga"". 24 September 2018.
  57. ^ "Partidul lui Dacian Cioloş se poziţionează la centru-stânga. E prima provocare pentru electoratul clasic al PSD". 31 March 2018.
  58. ^ "Top 30 partide politice din România". 10 October 2021.
  59. ^ "Partiti, elezioni e mobilitazione politica nella romania post-comunista (1989-2000)". Regione Toscana.
  60. ^ "PSD fuzioneaza cu PSM". 5 July 2003.
  61. ^ "Tovarasii string rindurile > EVZ.ro". www.evz.ro. Archived from the original on 5 July 2013. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
  62. ^ a b Gurzu, Anca (13 March 2019). "Romania's rulers take Euroskeptic turn". Politico. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  63. ^ "Romania". Europe Elects. 17 May 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  64. ^ a b Gilet, Kit (30 December 2018). "Romania, Fighting the E.U., Prepares to Lead It". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  65. ^ a b Gherghina, Sergiu (25 February 2019). "Friends or Foes? Romania and the Council Presidency". Europa Nu. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  66. ^ "Val de atacuri ale lui Dragnea la adresa UE: Noi nu am fost coloniști. Problema e că vin peste noi". Digi24 (in Romanian). 12 April 2019. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  67. ^ "Romania". Europe Elects. 2021. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  68. ^ a b "Familia (Politica) traditionala sau un referendum pentru rebranduirea PSD si PNL". 30 September 2018.
  69. ^ "Exclusiv Adrian Năstase: Cum a Intrat România În Nato Și Ue Fără Să Supere Rusia. Ce Avantaje Am Ratat la Zece Ani de la Tratatul de Aderare la Ue?". 28 April 2015.
  70. ^ "BBC în limba română | Forum | //".
  71. ^ "Fostul președinte Ion Iliescu: "Uniunea Europeană nu poate fi țap ispășitor pentru egoismul şi iresponsabilitatea unor lideri politici de la București sau de la Bruxelles"". 13 January 2019.
  72. ^ "10 ani în UE | Ion Iliescu: Succesul UE, vital pentru reducerea decalajelor care separă România de Occident". www.digi24.ro. January 2017.
  73. ^ "Romanian Senate adopts referendum for traditional family". Romania Insider. 12 September 2018. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  74. ^ "PSD aduce artileria grea: Biserica Ortodoxă e aruncată în lupta electorală. 'Decalog' pentru enoriașii alegători". Ziaristii (in Romanian). 10 November 2020. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  75. ^ Ciobanu, Claudia (6 October 2017). "Romania 'turns illiberal' with moves against gay marriage". Politico. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  76. ^ "Rumänien führt 'Steuer gegen Gier' ein". Deutsche Welle. 22 December 2018. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  77. ^ Bossart, Marco Kauffmann (21 February 2018). "Rumäniens Justiz im Belagerungszustand". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  78. ^ Melenciuc, Sorin (30 May 2018). "BR Analysis. Money to spend only on wages and pensions? Romania's social spending enters danger zone above 60 pct of total budget, limiting room for response in case of economic downturn". Business Review. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  79. ^ "2018 budget: Romania's Govt. plans to increase spending by 12% next year". Romania Insider. 4 December 2017. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  80. ^ a b Poenaru, Florin (2017). Locuri comune: clasă, anticomunism, stânga. Editura Tact. ISBN 978-606-8437-84-2. apud Cistelecan, Alex (29 May 2017). "Materialismul evanescent". revistavatra.org (in Romanian). Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  81. ^ Pleșu, Andrei; Pătrășconiu, Cristian (31 August 2010). "Orice doctrină devine periculoasă când se transformă în ideologie". Revista 22 PLUS (in Romanian) (301). Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  82. ^ "Ion Cristoiu: Iohannis a impus o atitudine de ură faţă de Biserică pentru a câştiga din electoratul USRPLUS". Mediafax.ro.
  83. ^ "La Roumanie sur la voie de la Hongrie et de la Pologne". Le Monde.fr. 31 December 2018.
  84. ^ "Ioan Stanomir : " La Roumanie a un grand problème d'amnésie "". La Croix. 9 March 2017.
  85. ^ "Şef PSD Diaspora: Nu trebuie să primim refugiaţi". www.digi24.ro. 9 September 2015.
  86. ^ "Ana Birchall (PSD): Cotele obligatorii de distribuire a imigranţilor ar fi o mare greşeală". 8 September 2015.
  87. ^ "Dragnea: Parca nu as vrea sa vad mii de imigranti pe strazile Bucurestiului".
  88. ^ "Rumänien startet EU-Ratsvorsitz mit neuer Attacke gegen Justizsystem". 27 December 2018.
  89. ^ "Ciolacu între "patriotismul economic" și "ajutorul divin" – DW – 13.06.2023". Deutsche Welle.
  90. ^ https://revista22.ro/opinii/andrei-cornea/este-psd-un-partid-social-democrat
  91. ^ "Dragnea vrea să lanseze o dezbatere despre legiferarea parteneriatului civil: E o minoritate pe care nu ne putem face că nu o vedem sau că nu există".
  92. ^ "Dragnea, despre proiectul Legii pentru parteneriatul civil. "Eventual facem referendum"".
  93. ^ Moldova, Europa Liberă (7 May 2018). "Liviu Dragnea: Parteneriatul civil între persoanele de același sex trebuie legiferat în România". Radio Europa Liberă.
  94. ^ (in Romanian) Ordonanța de urgență nr. 89/2001 pentru modificarea și completarea unor dispoziții din Codul penal referitoare la infracțiuni privind viața sexuală 20 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine, text published in the Official Gazette of Romania
  95. ^ Voichița Năchescu (22 May 2014). "Hierarchies of Difference: National Identity, Gay and Lesbian Rights, and the Church in Postcommunist Romania". Sexuality and Gender in Postcommunist Eastern Europe and Russia. Routledge. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-317-95559-7.
  96. ^ http://www.revistadesociologie.ro/pdf-uri/nr3-4-2011/02-VAndreescu.pdf
  97. ^ "Marcel Ciolacu, despre decizia CEDO referitoare la parteneriatul civil: Nu este pregătită societatea românească - Europa FM". 23 November 2023.
  98. ^ "Ciolacu, despre decizia CEDO referitoare la parteneriatul civil între persoane de acelaşi sex: Societatea românească încă nu e pregătită. Nu este nici prima, nici ultima care condamnă". 23 November 2023.
  99. ^ . www.revista22.ro. Archived from the original on 9 September 2018. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  100. ^ "ALIANȚA BOR - PSD. Operațiunea bani și imobile pentru Biserică contra voturi pro Ponta". 13 November 2014.
  101. ^ "Biserica Ortodoxă se implică în campania electorală: Mitropolitul Ardealului îndeamnă enoriașii să voteze doar cu PSD sau ALDE (VIDEO)". December 2016.
  102. ^ "Dragnea, despre impozitarea veniturilor Bisericii: Nu susţin; Cel puţin să le ajutăm să existe/ Gândul: Sfântul profit al Bisericii Ortodoxe. Ce excedent au declarat la Finanţe eparhiile BOR". Mediafax.ro.
  103. ^ "Firea da inca 10 milioane de lei pentru Catedrala Mantuirii Neamului: Vezi de unde se iau bani la rectificarea bugetara si unde se duc". Ziare.com.
  104. ^ Mihăilescu, Robert (3 December 2009). "Ion Caramitru demisioneaza din conducerea PNTCD: Sefii PSD, fosti nomenclaturisti sau copiii lor, sunt tarati de originea comunista. Nu cred in moartea comunismului prin comunisti". HotNewsRo. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  105. ^ "Romania ex-leader in 1990 deaths case". BBC News. 21 October 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  106. ^ "Alarming attempts to undermine Romanian democracy - Nobbling the nobblers". The Economist. 8 February 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  107. ^ Ilie, Luiza (10 May 2018). "Bucharest court acquits former Romanian PM in graft case". Reuters. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  108. ^ "Adrian Nastase s-a autosuspendat din conducerea PSD". HotNewsRo. 16 January 2006. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  109. ^ Banches, Ovidiu (17 August 2005). "Geoana, stenogramele si reformarea PSD". 9AM. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  110. ^ "Felul în care PSD a făcut jocurile Rusiei din 1989 încoace, reflectat de un expert în securitate națională: 10 august 2018 parte din planul ex-PCR-ului care ne conduce". 28 October 2019.
  111. ^ Shafir, Michael (2004), "Memories, Memorials and Membership: Romanian Utilitarian Anti-Semitism and Marshal Antonescu", Romania Since 1989: Politics, Economics, and Society, Lexington Books, p. 71
  112. ^ . European Jewish Press. 7 March 2012. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  113. ^ "'Elie Wiesel' Institute in Romania criticizes Senator Sova for statements made on a TV channel". actmedia.eu. Retrieved 7 March 2012. [permanent dead link]
  114. ^ "Sozi-Chef Ponta enthebt Parteisprecher Sova zeitweilig des Amtes wegen Holocaust-Leugnung" (in German). punkto.ro. Retrieved 7 March 2012. [permanent dead link]
  115. ^ . coe.int. 13 July 2018. Archived from the original on 19 July 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  116. ^ Carmen Paun (22 January 2017). "Romanians protest government plan to commute sentences". Politico.
  117. ^ Ilie, Luiza (10 February 2017). "'We see you' – Romanian activists become potent political force". Reuters. Retrieved 24 October 2021.

External links edit

  • Official website

44°27′40.46″N 26°4′52.85″E / 44.4612389°N 26.0813472°E / 44.4612389; 26.0813472

social, democratic, party, romania, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, romanian, january, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, romanian, article, machine, t. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Romanian January 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Romanian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 328 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Romanian Wikipedia article at ro Partidul Social Democrat Romania see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated ro Partidul Social Democrat Romania to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Social Democratic Party Romanian Partidul Social Democrat PSD is the largest social democratic 25 26 political party in Romania and also the largest overall political party in the country aside from European Parliament level where it is the second largest by total number of political representatives i e MEPs after the National Liberal Party PNL 27 It was founded by Ion Iliescu Romania s first democratically elected president at the 1990 Romanian general election 28 29 30 31 32 It is currently part of the National Coalition for Romania CNR which is a big tent grand coalition comprising also the National Liberal Party PNL The CNR formerly included the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania UDMR RMDSZ until mid June 2023 Social Democratic Party Partidul Social DemocratAbbreviationPSDPresidentMarcel CiolacuSecretary GeneralPaul StănescuFirst Vice PresidentsGabriela FireaSorin GrindeanuHonorary PresidentIon IliescuLeader in the SenateLucian RomașcanuLeader in the Chamber of DeputiesAlfred SimonisLeader in the European ParliamentDan NicaFounded7 April 1992 1992 04 07 FDSN 16 June 2001 2001 06 16 merger Merger ofPDSRPSDRPreceded byDemocratic National Salvation FrontHeadquartersȘoseaua Kiseleff 10 BucharestYouth wingSocial Democratic YouthWomen s wingOFSDMembership 2015 530 000 needs update IdeologySocial democracy 1 a Left wing nationalism 4 5 6 Left wing populism 6 7 8 Social conservatism 9 10 11 Christian left 12 13 14 Economic patriotism 15 16 17 Political positionCentre left 18 19 20 A National affiliationRed Quadrilateral 1992 1996 Social Democratic Pole of Romania 2000 2004 Social Liberal Union 2011 2014 Centre Left Alliance 2012 2014 National Coalition for Romania 2021 present European affiliationParty of European SocialistsInternational affiliationProgressive AllianceSocialist InternationalEuropean Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and DemocratsColours RedSenate49 136 a 21 Chamber of Deputies107 330 b 22 European Parliament8 33 23 Mayors1 362 3 176 24 County Presidents20 41 24 County Councilors362 1 340 24 Local Council Councilors13 820 39 900 24 Ministers9 18 c Party flagWebsitepsd wbr roPolitics of RomaniaPolitical partiesElectionsa 1 senator from PUSL in PSD parliamentary groupb 4 deputies from PUSL in PSD parliamentary groupc the current Prime Minister and a Deputy Prime Minister A The party has also been labelled as catch all 9 It is a member of the Progressive Alliance PA which was founded in 2013 33 Socialist International SI 34 and Party of European Socialists PES 35 As of 2015 the PSD had 530 000 members 36 needs update PSD traces its origins to the Democratic National Salvation Front FDSN a breakaway group established in 1992 from the center left National Salvation Front FSN established after 1989 In 1993 this merged with three other parties to become the Party of Social Democracy in Romania Romanian Partidul Democrației Sociale in Romania PDSR The present name was adopted after a merger with the smaller Romanian Social Democratic Party PSDR in 2001 37 Since its formation it has always been one of the two dominant parties of the country The PDSR governed Romania from 1992 to 1996 while the PSDR was a junior coalition partner between 1996 and 2000 The merged PSD was the senior party in the coalitions governing from 2000 to 2004 and from March 2014 to November 2015 as well as one of the main coalition partners between December 2008 and October 2009 with the Democratic Liberal Party PDL and again between May 2012 and March 2014 as part of the Social Liberal Union USL PSD left government after former Prime Minister Victor Ponta resigned in November 2015 only for PSD to return as the senior governing party in January 2017 shortly after it achieved a major victory in the 2016 Romanian legislative election The party remained in power at governmental level until 2019 before being voted down in the parliament and then endorsing a PNL minority government between 2019 and 2020 Subsequently it entered opposition between 2020 and 2021 before eventually returning to government within the CNR coalition in late 2021 Party founder Ion Iliescu is the only PSD candidate to become President of Romania he served in office from the 1989 to 1996 and again from 2000 to 2004 Currently PSD is the largest party in the Parliament of Romania with initially 47 seats in the Senate of Romania and 110 seats in the Chamber of Deputies as obtained at the 2020 Romanian legislative election it also has the largest number of mayors as well as the second largest number of local and county councillors and county presidents after PNL remaining the biggest and most influential political force in the country to the present day 38 39 Contents 1 History 2 Predecessors and successors 2 1 Party splits 2 2 Absorbed parties 3 Ideology and platform 4 Structure 4 1 President 4 2 Honorary President 4 3 Secretary General 4 4 Permanent National Bureau 4 5 National Executive Committee 4 6 National Council 4 7 Congress 5 Party leadership 5 1 Presidents 5 2 Executive presidents 6 Notable members 6 1 Current notable members 6 2 Former notable members 7 Electoral history 7 1 Legislative elections 7 2 Local elections 7 2 1 County council elections 7 2 2 Mayor of Bucharest elections 7 3 Presidential elections 7 4 European Parliament elections 8 Controversies 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory editFollowing the 27 29 May 1992 Convention of the National Salvation Front Romanian Frontul Salvării Naționale FSN when Petre Roman became President of the Party former Party Leader Ion Iliescu and his group of supporters withdraw from FSN and founded the Democratic National Salvation Front Romanian Frontul Democrat al Salvării Naționale FDSN while the rest of FSN was renamed as the Democratic Party Romanian Partidul Democrat in May 1993 40 During its first National Conference on the 28th of June 1992 FDSN decided on endorsing Ion Iliescu in the 1992 Romanian general election 41 which they later won and went on to govern Romania until 1996 37 On 10 July 1993 it took the name of Party of Social Democracy in Romania PDSR upon merger with the Socialist Democratic Party of Romania the Republican Party and the Cooperative Party 42 37 nbsp The logo of the Party of Social Democracy in Romania From 1992 to 1996 the PDSR ruled in coalition with the Romanian National Unity Party PUNR and Greater Romania Party PRM and the left wing Socialist Party of Labour PSM nicknemed by the Press as the Red Quadrilateral The PUNR had ministers in the cabinet chaired by Nicolae Văcăroiu from March 1992 to September 1996 The PRM was not present at the cabinet level but was given some posts in the state administration but which it retracted when it left the coalition in 1995 43 PDSR went into opposition after the 1996 Romanian general election which was won by the right wing coalition Romanian Democratic Convention CDR citation needed After four years of governmental turmoil and economic downfall poorly managed by the crumbling CDR saw PDSR making a fulminant comeback winning the 2000 Romanian general election this time in a coalition named the Social Democratic Pole of Romania PDSR along with the Romanian Social Democratic Party PSDR and the Romanian Humanist Party PUR The PSDR merged with PDSR on 16 June 2001 and the resulting party took the PSD name nbsp The former blue and white PSD logo used between 2001 and 2006 In November 2004 Adrian Năstase the PSD candidate and incumbent Prime Minister of Romania won the first round of the presidential elections but did not have a majority and had to go to a second round of voting which he narrowly lost to Traian Băsescu of the opposition Justice and Truth Alliance DA who became Romania s 4th president In the 2004 Romanian general election the PSD gained the largest share of the vote but because it did not have a majority the other parties that managed to enter parliament UDMR RMDSZ and PUR abandoned their respective pre electoral agreements with the PSD and joined the Justice and Truth Alliance DA mainly at the pressure of Băsescu Mircea Geoană was elected president of the party in April 2005 by delegates at a PSD Party Congress held in Bucharest His victory represented a surprise defeat for Iliescu who was expected to defeat Geoană with ease On 17 April 2008 the PSD and the PC announced they would form a political alliance for the 2008 Romanian local elections 44 In February 2010 the Congress elected Victor Ponta as president after Geoană lost the 2009 Romanian presidential election On 5 February 2011 the PSD formed a political alliance known as the Social Liberal Union USL with the PC and the National Liberal Party PNL 45 The USL was disbanded on 25 February 2014 with exit of the PNL which entered the opposition 46 In July 2015 Liviu Dragnea was elected by the Congress of the PSD as the new president of the party with 97 of the votes from the members He was elected as leader after the former prime minister Victor Ponta stepped down on 12 July 2015 following charges of corruption that were later dropped On 12 April 2019 the PSD was suspended from the Party of European Socialists PES following concerns about judicial reforms of the Dăncilă Cabinet 47 In May 2019 after Liviu Dragnea s jailing Viorica Dăncilă was elected by the Congress of the PSD as the new president of the party After being ousted from power in October 2019 the PSD also lost the 2019 Romanian presidential election Such decline sent shockwase across the European Union EU especially the PES as it resulted in their loss of power within von der Leyen Commission Nonetheless Daniel Hegedus posited that this could be a win for both the PES and the wider European left as the PES would regain credibility because mounting authoritarianism in Hungary and Poland has suffered under the burden of PSD s rule of law record In addition Hegedus noted the fact that this could represent another chance for the PSD to reform itself and change its ways 48 In August 2020 Marcel Ciolacu became president of the party after having previously served for this position only as ad interim between November 2019 and August 2020 49 During the same month the PSD was willing to vote a motion of no confidence against the second Orban cabinet 38 Shortly after December 2020 while still the largest party in the wake of the 2020 Romanian legislative election the PSD suffered significant political capital losses as they previously did in the 2020 Romanian local elections as well given the chaotic and negative governmental activity the party was responsible for during the former legislature more specifically during the years 2017 and 2019 yet remained the biggest parliamentary opposition well up until the end of 2021 During the 2021 Romanian political crisis the PSD was again willing to have such a vote this time against the Cițu Cabinet 50 which it subsequently did 51 thereby contributing to its final dismissal 39 In November 2021 successful negotiations with the PNL led the PSD closer to returning government in the incumbent Ciucă Cabinet within a grand coalition government known as the National Coalition for Romania or CNR for short 52 The PSD is still governing Romania as of early 2022 albeit with major tensions in the said grand coalition The coalition has been described as authoritarian conservative 53 54 In November 2022 the PSD agreed with the Moldovan European Social Democratic Party PSDE to begin a strategic partnership 55 Predecessors and successors edit nbsp Flowchart denoting the political evolution of PSD from its origins in the FSN in 1990 until the year 2010 with political groups which were both integrated and seceded from the party throughout the passing of time Party splits edit Alliance for Romania 1997 National Union for the Progress of Romania 2010 Romanian Social Party 2015 United Romania Party 2015 PRO Romania 2018 Romanian Nationhood Party 2019 Absorbed parties edit Republican Party 1993 1 Cooperative Party 1993 1 Romanian Socialist Democratic Party 1993 1 Romanian Social Democratic Party 2001 2 Alliance for Romania 2002 Socialist Party of Labour 2003 Socialist Party of the National Renaissance 2003 Romanian Social Party 2018 United Romania Party 2019 Alliance for the Homeland 2023 Notes 1 After the merger the party changed its name from the Democratic National Salvation Front FDSN to the Party of Social Democracy in Romania PDSR 2 After the merger the party changed its name from the Party of Social Democracy in Romania PDSR to the Social Democratic Party PSD Ideology and platform editLike its counterpart national level members of the Party of European Socialists PES the PSD has a centre left outlook and has been described as governing as centre left 56 57 58 but has also been described as pragmatic 9 owing to its syncretic politics 9 5 The PSD was formed as a result of the merger of the Romanian Social Democratic Party PSDR which had an internationalist social democratic ideology with the Party of Social Democracy in Romania PDSR whose governance was marked by a combination of social democracy democratic socialism labourism pragmatism left wing populism and nationalism 59 The 2003 absorption of the Socialist Party of Labour PSM and the Socialist Party of the National Renaissance PSRN led to the strengthening of the left wing nationalism component within the party 60 61 Until 2021 62 63 64 65 unlike the majority of Western European PES party members and as other like minded centre left social democratic parties in Central and Eastern European post Communism it has taken a more soft Eurosceptic 62 outlook 64 65 66 though it is neutral in regards to European integration 67 PSD stated that it endorses EU and NATO membership 68 69 70 71 72 The party is more conservative than PES when it comes to social issues 11 73 74 reflecting the country s social conservative outlook 75 including in its centre right counterpart the National Liberal Party PNL 10 It has been described as a left wing nationalist 5 76 6 and left wing populist 77 7 8 social democratic party 10 78 79 The party has been described as having centre left rhetoric and economic policies while being more conservative on personal and ethical matters According to Florin Poenaru the movement led by Ion Iliescu was from the very beginning the party of local capitalists and not of the industrial proletariat PSD was the party that aggregated the interests of the autochthonous capitalists but whose electoral basis was the former industrial proletariat 80 Poenaru states that PSD never said no to the neoliberal agenda but applied it rather slowly 80 Andrei Pleșu once stated that the main post Communist Romanian parties do not act according to some ideology or doctrine 81 Political analyst Radu Magdin said that the PSD is a catch all party its values are conservative its economic policy is liberal and it has a social left leaning rhetoric when it comes to public policies An example is their calls for both tax cuts and pensions and wages increase in 2016 9 Its more conservative outlook is owed to the social conservative nature of post Communist countries and has been adopted by both the centre left PSD and the centre right PNL 82 For Cornel Ban Assistant Professor of International Relations at the Pardee School of Boston University the PSD is an anomaly in Eastern Europe in that it was an ideal playground for right wing populist parties but has seen the political left routinely win this was in part because the political right and far right were in government including at the local level during the post Communist slumps which remained in the mind of many voters 10 Journalist Jean Baptiste Chastand said that the PSD led pro European government in Romania took a national conservative turn 83 The historian Ioan Stanomir stated that PSD is a conservative party that has nothing to do with the left 84 while journalist Bogdan Tiberiu Iacob described the party as progressive conservative 68 PSD also opposed the mandatory refugee quotas 85 86 87 Journalist Daniel Mihăilescu labeled the party as national populist 88 Deutsche Welle stated that unlike most European Social democratic parties PSD is against social progressivism and is strongly conservative 89 Journalist and philosipher Andrei Cornea also stated that PSD is not a social democratic party but a patrimonial conservative one structured around vassalism and clientelism whose essential electoral pool is formed by a poor ignorant and especially devoid of civic conscience 90 In regards to LGBT rights in general PSD opposes the recognition of same sex marriages and civil partnerships However in 2018 then PSD president Liviu Dragnea hinted that PSD could support the recognition the civil partnership 91 92 93 Also in January 2001 it was the PSD dominated Adrian Năstase s government that adopted the Emergency Ordinance no 89 2001 94 which eliminated Art 200 of the Penal Code and adjusted other articles referring to sex offences to avoid discriminatory treatment of offenders thus legalising same sex relations 95 This ordinance came into force in January 2002 after President Ion Iliescu the founder of PSD signed the new law 96 However the current president of the Social Democrats Marcel Ciolacu is a strong opponent to the recognition of same sex marriage and the civil partnership 97 98 The party has strong connections with the Romanian Orthodox Church BOR reflecting the party s social conservatism 99 100 101 102 103 Structure editPresident edit The president of the party conducts the general activity of the party the activity of the National Executive Committee and the National Permanent Bureau and responds to the Congress on the general work of the PSD The president is elected by secret vote by the Congress for a four year mandate and represents the party in the Romanian society in relations with the central and local public authorities as well as with other parties or organizations in the country or abroad Honorary President edit PSD Honorary President is nominated by Congress for the four year mandate of the party s recognized personalities The Honorary President of the PSD participates with the right to vote in the work of the national governing bodies Secretary General edit The Secretary General manages the functional services at the central level and the relationship with the county and Bucharest organizations It coordinates the Executive Secretariat of the PSD with 7 to 9 executive secretaries Executive secretaries shall be appointed by the National Executive Committee on a proposal from the chair after consulting the Secretary General Permanent National Bureau edit The Permanent National Bureau is the operative body for analyzing and deciding the party It has the following composition PSD President PSD Honorary President PSD Secretary General PSD Deputy Chairpersons At the National Permanent Bureau the chairman of the National Council the leaders of the parliamentary groups the presidents of women and youth organizations the treasurer the director of the Social Democratic Institute the representative of the county administrative council presidents the mayors of municipalities and the representative of the National League of Mayors and PSD Councilors participate The National Permanent Bureau meets weekly usually Monday The Permanent National Bureau have the following duties To organize and direct the entire activity of the party according to the decisions adopted as appropriate by the Congress the National Council and the National Executive Committee Drafts draft decisions that it submits to the debate and adoption of the National Executive Committee Orientates the work of parliamentary groups Establishes and coordinates working committees on doctrine electoral programs and strategies Establishes and co ordinates political analysis groups of the economic social domestic and international situation Manages the party s patrimony National Executive Committee edit Coordinates the entire activity of the party between the meetings of the National Council The PSD National Executive Committee analyzes debates and decides on the fundamental issues of the Party s work on the program the electoral strategy the political and electoral alliances the governing program the structure and the nominal composition of the Government the validation of the party s preliminary election for the nomination of candidates for senators MEPs MEPs and elected local merging by absorption or merging with other parties PSD collaboration agreements with trade unions and employers confederations the strategy of selecting preparing training and promoting the party s human resources organizing and conducting internal party choices coordinating the activities of the Youth Organization and the Women s Organization The adopted decisions are validated by the National Council The National Executive Committee consists of PSD President PSD Honorary President PSD Secretary General PSD Vice Presidents President of the National Council Presidents of County Organizations Sectors and the Bucharest Municipality Organization the President of the Women s Organization and the President of the Youth Organization National Council edit nbsp Adrian Năstase during a meeting of the National Council in November 2013 The National Council is the governing body of the party in the interval between two congresses It consists of a maximum of 751 members elected from the candidates nominated by the County and Bucharest Conferences or proposed by the Congress The National Council elects and revokes by secret vote the President of the National Council and the treasurer validates the composition of the National Executive Committee and The Permanent National Bureau decides to conclude political alliances as well as merge by merging or absorbing with other political parties or political parties to hear the activity reports submitted by members of the Permanent National Bureau by the Chairman of the Commission for Arbitration and Moral Integrity by the President of the National Commission for Financial Control and Treasurer and decides accordingly on the basis of the mandate given by the Congress according to the provisions of the Statute is responsible for organizing presidential parliamentary euro parliamentary and local electoral campaigns analyzes the work of parliamentary groups women s and youth organizations the National League of Mayors and PSD Councilors validates the decisions of the National Executive Committee on the Governance Program and confirms the proposals of members of the Government resolve the appeals lodged against the decisions of the councils of the county organizations or of the Bucharest municipality resolves the divergences between the Councils of the County Organizations respectively the Bucharest Municipality Organization and the National Executive Committee in connection with the nomination of the candidates for the legislative elections if they persist approves the party s annual revenue and expenditure budget decides on its execution The PSD National Council meets annually and whenever needed Deputies senators and MEPs who are not members of the National Council participate in its meetings without the right to vote The National Council may decide on a proposal from the Permanent National Bureau to organize forums leagues associations clubs and other such bodies for the promotion of strategies in the PSD Political Program in the Romanian society and in partnership with the trade unions The party union relationship as well as the concrete ways of collaboration will be established by the National Permanent Bureau Within the PSD there are the National Workers Forum National Farmers Forum National Ecologists Forum The National Forum of Scientists Culture and Art and the Pensioners League In order to develop PSD programs and strategies in the field of party life consultative councils can be set up on political analysis image and relations with the media organization and human resources The Consultative Council for the Problems of National Minorities of the PSD carries out activities to identify the specific problems faced by national minorities in Romania and develops appropriate solutions and proposals for their resolution Congress edit The supreme governing party of the Social Democratic Party is the Congress which is convened every four years or in extraordinary cases The PSD Congress is made up of elected delegates by secret ballot by the County Conferences and the Bucharest Municipality and has the following attributions adopting or modifying the PSD Statute and the Political Program of the Party sets out the party s guidelines strategy and tactics for the period between two congresses elects the party chairman the vice presidents the general secretary the other members of the National Council the National Commission for Arbitration and Moral Integrity and the National Commission for Financial Control appoints the PSD candidate to the position of President of Romania and the Prime Minister in the event of winning the elections resolves possible appeals against decisions of other PSD central bodies Party leadership edit Also served as President of Romania Also served as Prime Minister Also served as Chamber President Also served as Senate President Nº NameBirth Death Portrait Term start Term end Duration 1 Ion Iliescu 1930 nbsp 7 April 1992 11 October 1992 6 months and 4 days 2 Oliviu Gherman 1930 2020 11 October 1992 January 1997 c 4 years and 2 months 1 Ion Iliescu 1930 nbsp January 1997 20 December 2000 c 4 years 3 Adrian Năstase1 1950 nbsp 20 December 2000 21 January 2005 4 years 1 month and 1 day 4 Mircea Geoană 1958 nbsp 2005 2010 c 5 years 5 Victor Ponta 1972 nbsp 21 February 2010 12 July 2015 5 years 4 months and 21 days Rovana Plumb acting 1960 nbsp 24 June 2015 22 July 2015 28 days Liviu Dragnea acting 1962 nbsp 22 July 2015 12 October 2015 2 months and 20 days 6 Liviu Dragnea 1962 nbsp 12 October 2015 27 May 2019 3 years 7 months and 15 days 7 Viorica Dăncilă 1963 nbsp 27 May 2019 26 November 2019 5 months and 30 days Marcel Ciolacu acting 1967 nbsp 26 November 2019 22 August 2020 8 months and 27 days 8 Marcel Ciolacu 1967 nbsp 22 August 2020 Incumbent 3 years 8 months and 4 days Notes 1 Năstase served twice as Chamber President the first term from March 1992 to May 1996 while the second from December 2004 to March 2006 Presidents edit Oliviu Gherman 1992 1996 FDSN PDSR Ion Iliescu 1992 1997 2000 PDSR Adrian Năstase 2000 2005 acting ad interim until 2001 PDSR PSD Mircea Geoană 2005 2010 PSD Victor Ponta 2010 2015 PSD Rovana Plumb 2015 acting ad interim PSD Liviu Dragnea 2015 2019 PSD Viorica Dăncilă 2019 PSD Marcel Ciolacu 2019 present acting ad interim until 2020 PSD Executive presidents edit Adrian Năstase 1993 1997 position abolished 1997 2003 Octav Cozmancă 2003 2005 Adrian Năstase 2005 2006 Dan Mircea Popescu ro 2005 2006 when the office was dissolved nominated acting ad interim after the resignation of Adrian Năstase from the office position abolished 2006 2013 Liviu Dragnea 2013 2015 Valeriu Zgonea 2015 2016 Niculae Bădălău ro 2016 2018 Viorica Dăncilă 2018 2019 Paul Stănescu 2019 acting ad interim Eugen Teodorovici ro 2019 position abolished 2019 present Notable members editCurrent notable members edit Ion Iliescu founder of the party the party FDSN which then became PDSR and ultimately as PSD former President of Romania and Honorary President of PSD Nicolae Văcăroiu former Prime Minister of Romania Alexandru Athanasiu former acting Prime Minister Viorel Hrebenciuc former deputy Eugen Bejinariu former acting Prime Minister Ilie Sarbu former President of the Senate Paul Stănescu former Deputy Prime Minister as well as Minister of Regional Development Ecaterina Andronescu former Minister of Education Marcel Ciolacu current president of the party since 2019 onwards Gabriela Firea former Mayor of Bucharest Titus Corlățean Minister of Foreign Affairs Minister of Justice Rovana Plumb MEP Minister of Environment Minister of Labour Mihai Tudose former Prime Minister of Romania Sorin Grindeanu former Prime Minister of Romania Mihai Fifor former acting Prime Minister of Romania Dan Nica former deputy and current MEP Lia Olguța Vasilescu Mayor of Craiova Minister of Labour Alexandru Rafila current Health Minister Former notable members edit Gabriel Oprea former army general now general in army reserves former Minister of National Defence former Deputy Prime Minister of Romania former Minister of Internal Affairs former acting Prime Minister of Romania Corina Crețu former European Commissioner for Cohesion and Reforms Viorica Dăncilă former president of the party former Prime Minister of Romania Adrian Năstase former president of the party former Prime Minister of Romania as well as former Minister of Foreign Affairs Teodor Meleșcanu former Minister of Defence former acting Minister of Justice former Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service SRI former Minister of Foreign Affairs three times former President of the Senate Robert Negoiță former Mayor of the 3rd Sector of Bucharest Mircea Geoană former president of the party former President of the Senate as well as former Minister of Foreign Affairs Sorin Oprescu former Mayor of Bucharest Marian Vanghelie former Mayor of the 5th Sector of Bucharest Radu Mazăre former Mayor of Constanța Victor Ponta former president of the party as well as former Prime Minister of Romania Valeriu Zgonea former President of the Chamber of Deputies Liviu Dragnea former president of the party as well as former President of the Chamber of Deputies Oliviu Gherman former president of the party as well as former President of the Chamber of Deputies Șerban Valeca acting President of the Senate Hildegard Puwak former Minister for European Integration Antonie Iorgovan lead author of the 1991 Romanian Constitution Cristian Diaconescu former State Secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs former Minister of Justice former Minister of Foreign Affairs twice Electoral history editLegislative elections edit Year Chamber Senate Position Aftermath Votes Seats Votes Seats 1992 3 015 708 27 72 117 341 3 102 201 28 29 49 143 1st as FDSN PDSR PUNR PRM PSM government 1992 1996 1996 2 633 860 21 52 91 343 2 836 011 23 08 41 143 2nd as PDSR Opposition to CDR USD UDMR government 1996 2000 2000 3 968 464 36 61 139 345 4 040 212 37 09 59 140 1st within PDSR 1 PDSR minority government 2000 2004 2004 3 730 352 36 61 113 332 3 798 607 36 30 46 137 1st within PSD PUR 2 Opposition to DA PUR3 UDMR government 2004 2007 Endorsing PNL UDMR minority government 2007 2008 2008 2 279 449 33 10 110 334 2 352 968 34 16 48 137 2nd within PSD PC 4 PDL PSD government 2008 2009 Opposition to PDL UNPR UDMR government 2009 2012 USL government 2012 2012 4 344 288 58 63 149 412 4 457 526 60 10 58 176 1st within USL 5 USL government 2012 2014 PSD UNPR UDMR PC government 2014 PSD UNPR ALDE government 2014 2015 Endorsing the technocratic Cioloș Cabinet 2015 2017 2016 3 204 864 45 48 154 329 3 221 786 45 68 67 136 1st PSD ALDE government 2017 2019 PSD minority government 2019 Endorsing PNL minority government 2019 2020 Opposition to PNL minority government 2020 2020 1 705 777 28 90 110 330 1 732 276 29 32 47 136 1st Opposition to PNL USR PLUS UDMR government 2020 2021 Opposition to PNL UDMR minority government 2021 CNR government 2021 present 2024 TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Notes 1 Social Democratic Pole of Romania members PDSR PSDR 2 senators and 10 deputies and PUR 4 senators and 6 deputies 2 National Union PSD PUR members PSD and PUR 11 senators and 19 deputies 3 Soon after the elections PUR broke the alliance with the PSD and switched sides joining the government led by the Justice and Truth Alliance DA 4 Alliance PSD PC members PSD and PC 1 senator and 4 deputies 5 The Social Liberal Union USL was an alliance consisting of two smaller alliances more specifically the Centre Left Alliance ACS and the Centre Right Alliance ACD The members of the Centre Left Alliance ACS were the PSD and the UNPR 5 senators and 10 deputies whereas the members of the Centre Right Alliance ACD were the PNL 50 senators and 100 deputies and the PC 8 senators and 13 deputies Local elections edit Year County councilors Mayors Local councilors Popular vote Position Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats 1996 1 390 225 16 28 290 1 718 2 713 095 26 28 928 2 954 1 716 899 18 82 9 483 33 429 1st 2000 2 241 930 27 4 496 1 718 2 416 598 27 4 1 050 2 954 2 197 719 25 8 11 380 39 718 1st 2004 2 957 617 32 70 543 1 436 3 908 895 41 83 1 702 3 137 2 951 226 31 88 14 990 40 031 1st 2008 2 337 102 27 97 452 1 393 2 717 490 30 77 1 138 3 179 2 268 271 26 67 12 137 40 297 2nd 2012 4 203 007 49 68 723 1 338 2 782 792 33 99 1 292 3 121 2 630 123 32 74 12 668 39 121 1st as USL 2016 3 270 909 39 60 638 1 434 3 330 213 38 98 1 708 3 186 3 161 046 37 70 16 969 40 067 1st 2020 1 605 721 22 32 362 1 340 2 262 791 30 34 1 362 3 176 2 090 777 28 40 13 820 39 900 2nd 2024 TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD Year County presidents Position Votes Seats 1992 30 41 1st as FSN 1996 17 41 1st 2000 29 41 1st 2004 19 41 1st 2008 2 234 465 28 06 17 41 1st 2012 4 260 709 49 71 22 41 1st within USL 2016 28 41 1st 2020 1 663 399 22 86 20 41 1st 2024 TBD TBD TBD TBD County council elections edit Election County Percentage Councillors Aftermath 2020 Alba 16 61 6 32 nbsp 3 Opposition 2020 Arad 9 89 3 32 nbsp 8 Opposition 2020 Argeș 44 78 17 34 nbsp 3 PSD minority 2020 Bacău 42 25 17 36 nbsp PSD 2020 Bihor 15 54 6 34 nbsp 3 Opposition 2020 Bistrița Năsăud 40 62 14 30 nbsp 3 PSD PMP 2020 Botoșani 40 13 15 32 nbsp 3 PSD 2020 Brăila 47 97 17 30 nbsp 3 PSD majority 2020 Brașov 19 35 8 34 nbsp 3 Opposition 2020 Bucharest 32 38 21 55 nbsp 3 Opposition 2020 Buzău 57 68 21 32 nbsp 1 PSD majority 2020 Călărași 45 09 15 30 nbsp 3 PSD minority 2020 Caraș Severin 27 51 10 30 nbsp 4 PSD PMP 2020 Cluj 13 32 5 36 nbsp 7 Opposition 2020 Constanța 23 01 10 36 nbsp 6 Opposition 2020 Covasna 5 73 2 30 nbsp 1 Opposition 2020 Dambovița 43 66 17 34 nbsp 5 PSD majority 2020 Dolj 39 66 16 36 nbsp 9 PSD PRO PER 2020 Galați 39 73 17 34 nbsp 2 PSD majority 2020 Giurgiu 33 20 12 30 nbsp 8 Opposition 2020 Gorj 42 95 16 32 nbsp PSD majority 2020 Harghita 7 76 3 30 nbsp Opposition 2020 Hunedoara 43 80 17 32 nbsp 1 PSD majority 2020 Ialomița 37 27 14 30 nbsp 4 PSD PNL 2020 Iași 24 49 10 36 nbsp 7 Opposition 2020 Ilfov 12 81 5 32 nbsp 7 Opposition 2020 Maramureș 25 14 10 34 nbsp 9 Opposition 2020 Mehedinți 45 58 15 30 nbsp 3 PSD majority 2020 Mureș 17 87 7 34 nbsp 3 Opposition 2020 Neamț 35 76 13 34 nbsp 4 Opposition 2020 Olt 54 44 21 32 nbsp 2 PSD majority 2020 Prahova 31 59 11 36 nbsp 5 Opposition 2020 Sălaj 27 89 10 30 nbsp 2 Opposition 2020 Satu Mare 14 00 5 32 nbsp 4 Opposition UDMR PSD PMP 2020 Sibiu 13 90 5 32 nbsp 7 Opposition 2020 Suceava 30 47 13 36 nbsp 3 Opposition 2020 Teleorman 39 37 15 32 nbsp 3 Opposition 2020 Timiș 15 02 7 36 nbsp 9 Opposition 2020 Tulcea 34 35 12 30 nbsp 2 Opposition 2020 Valcea 41 69 16 32 nbsp 2 PSD PER 2020 Vaslui 39 11 14 34 nbsp 6 PSD 2020 Vrancea 41 91 15 32 nbsp 3 PSD Mayor of Bucharest elections edit Year Candidate First round Second round Votes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position 1996 Ilie Năstase 30 38 2nd 43 26 2nd 2000 Sorin Oprescu 260 689 41 16 1st 353 038 49 31 2nd 2004 Mircea Geoană 225 774 29 74 2nd 2008 Cristian Diaconescu 67 251 12 33 3rd not qualified 2012 Sorin Oprescu1 430 512 53 79 1st 2016 Gabriela Firea 246 553 42 97 1st 2020 Gabriela Firea 250 690 37 97 2nd 2024 Gabriela Firea TBD TBD TBD Notes 1 Independent candidate endorsed by the USL Presidential elections edit Year Candidate First round Second round Votes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position 1990 Ion Iliescu 12 232 498 85 0 1st 1992 Ion Iliescu 5 633 465 47 5 1st 7 393 429 61 4 1st 1996 Ion Iliescu 4 081 093 32 3 1st 5 914 579 45 6 2nd 2000 Ion Iliescu 4 076 273 36 4 1st 6 696 623 66 8 1st 2004 Adrian Năstase 4 278 864 40 9 1st 4 881 520 48 8 2nd 2009 Mircea Geoană 3 027 838 31 1 2nd 5 205 760 49 7 2nd 2014 Victor Ponta 3 836 093 40 4 1st 5 264 383 45 6 2nd 2019 Viorica Dăncilă 2 051 725 22 3 2nd 3 339 922 33 9 2nd 2024 TBA TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD European Parliament elections edit Year Votes MEPs Position EU party EP group Jan 2007 34 28 nbsp 12 35 nbsp 1st nbsp PES S amp D Nov 2007 1 184 018 nbsp 23 11 nbsp 10 35 nbsp 2nd nbsp PES S amp D 2009 1 504 218 nbsp 31 07 nbsp 10 33 nbsp 1st within PSD PC 1 nbsp PES S amp D 2014 2 093 237 nbsp 37 60 nbsp 12 32 nbsp 1st within USD 2 nbsp PES S amp D 2019 2 040 765 nbsp 22 51 nbsp 9 32 nbsp 2nd nbsp PES S amp D 2024 TBD TBD TBD TBD PES S amp D Notes 1 Alliance PSD PC members PSD and PC 1 MEP 2 Social Democratic Union USD members PSD PC 2 MEPs and UNPR 2 MEPs Controversies editPolitical opponents have criticised PSD for harbouring former Romanian Communist Party PCR officials and for allegedly attempting to control the Romanian mass media By 2009 a number of its incumbent or former senior members have also been accused of corruption interfering in the judiciary and using their political positions for personal enrichment 104 As of 2015 founding member Ion Iliescu is facing prosecution on charges of crimes against humanity for his role in the June 1990 Mineriad 105 while former president Liviu Dragnea was convicted for electoral fraud and for instigation to the abuse of public office and being indicted for forming an organised criminal group in 2018 106 That same year former president Victor Ponta had also been investigated for corruption but was ultimately acquitted 107 Adrian Năstase temporarily self suspended himself from the position on 16 January 2006 pending investigation of a scandal provoked by his wealth declaration where he was accused of corruption 108 Alleged text transcripts of PSD meetings surfaced on an anonymous website just before the 2004 Romanian general election Năstase and his ministers are shown talking about political involvement in corruption trials of the government s members or involvement in suppressing disobedient media Năstase stated that the transcripts were fake but several party members including former PSD president and former foreign minister Mircea Geoană have said they are genuine though Geoană later retracted his statement 109 Security expert Iulian Fota stated that PSD is a neocommunist anti Western party backed by Russia 110 Politicians of the party have occasionally employed utilitarian anti Semitism meaning that politicians who may usually not be antisemites played off certain antisemitic prejudices in order to serve their political necessities 111 On 5 March 2012 PSD Senator Dan Șova at that time the party spokesman said on The Money Channel that no Jew suffered on Romanian territory thanks to marshal Antonescu 112 Elie Wiesel National Institute for Studying the Holocaust in Romania expressed its deep disagreement and indignation over the statements of the spokesman of the party 113 Following public outcry Șova retracted his statement and issued a public apology nevertheless the chairman of the party Victor Ponta announced his removal from the office of party spokesman 114 Between 2017 and 2019 the party along with its former junior coalition partners more specifically the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats ALDE and the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania UDMR RMDSZ had unsuccessfully tried to pass a series of tremendously controversial laws related to the judicial system In a 2018 preliminary opinion the Venice Commission stated that the changes could severely undermine the independence of judges and prosecutors in Romania 115 This unsuccessful endeavour committed by the former PSD ALDE coalition was the basis for the nationwide 2017 2019 Romanian protests 116 the largest in the country s entire history thus far 117 See also editPolitics of RomaniaNotes edit Some argue that in practice the Social Democratic Party has little in common with social democracy despite the party s official stance 2 3 References edit Nordsieck Wolfram 2020 Parties and Elections in Europe Parties and Elections in Europe Archived from the original on 14 February 2018 Retrieved 18 December 2020 https revista22 ro opinii andrei cornea este psd un partid social democrat https www dw com ro deputat german psd nu este un partid social democrat a 46422145 Rumanien fuhrt Steuer gegen Gier ein Deutsche Welle 22 December 2018 Retrieved 18 February 2019 a b c Leisse Olaf Leisse Utta Kristin Richter Alexander 2013 2004 3 3 Parteien und politische Entwicklung Beitrittsbarometer Rumanien Grundprobleme des Landes und Einstellungen rumanischer Jugendlicher auf dem Weg in die Europaische Union in German Wiesbaden Deutscher UniversitatsVerlag p 51 ISBN 978 3322813206 a b c Mihăilescu Daniel 2019 Rumanien startet EU Ratsvorsitz mit neuer Attacke gegen Justizsystem Die Presse Retrieved 19 February 2019 a b Krokel Ulrich 10 March 2017 Aufgefallen Der stille Anfuhrer Publik Forum de in German Retrieved 17 October 2019 a b Beichelt Timm 2013 2001 6 1 1 Strukturelle Kontextbindungen Demokratische Konsolidierung im postsozialistischen Europa Die Rolle der politischen Institutionen in German Springer Verlag p 299 ISBN 978 3322813206 a b c d e Păun Carmen 13 December 2016 Pragmatism is a winner for Romanian Left Politico Retrieved 16 February 2019 a b c d Ban Cornel 12 December 2016 Romania a social democratic anomaly in eastern Europe openDemocracy Retrieved 17 October 2019 a b Daborowski Tomasz 14 December 2016 The Social Democrats triumph in Romania OSW Retrieved 17 October 2019 Marcel Ciolacu vrea Bac la Religie Romania una dintre cele mai sigure și tolerante țări din lume PSD va susține in Parlament ca Religia să fie materie la bac Ciolacu Ce anume ne deranjează Suntem creștini 17 March 2023 Marcel Ciolacu despre Religia ca materie de Bacalaureat Suntem crestini ne am crescut copiii in valorile crestine 17 March 2023 Ciolacu Aș vrea o tendință mai mare către un patriotism economic in următorul program de guvernare 26 March 2023 Marcel Ciolacu explică ce este patriotismul economic propus de PSD 27 March 2023 Romanian Social Democrats to pursue economic patriotism 20 March 2023 Romania Parties at a glance PARTIDUL SOCIAL DEMOCRAT P S D PSD si UNPR vor forma o alianta politica de centru stanga Grupuri parlamentare Senatul Romaniei Parliamentary groups Romanian Senate Senat in Romanian Senate of Romania Retrieved 2 November 2021 Camera Deputaţilor legislatura 2020 prezent Chamber of Deputies 2020 present legislature CDEP in Romanian Chamber of Deputies of Romania Retrieved 2 November 2021 2019 European election results European Parliament 23 October 2019 Retrieved 2 November 2021 a b c d Rezultate finale 27 Septembrie 2020 Final results 27 September 2020 in Romanian Central Election Bureau of Romania Retrieved 2 November 2021 Almeida Dimitri 2012 The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties Beyond the Permissive Consensus CRC Press p 71 ISBN 9781136340390 Retrieved 2 November 2021 via Google Books Romania Political parties European Election Database Norwegian Centre for Research Data Retrieved 17 October 2021 Nordsieck Wolfram December 2020 Parties and Elections in Europe Parties and Elections in Europe Archived from the original on 7 October 2021 Retrieved 23 October 2021 Hogea Alina Coming to Terms with the Communist Past in Romania An Analysis of the Political and Media Discourse Concerning the Tismăneanu Report Studies of Transition States and Societies 2 16 30 Tismăneanu Vladimir 7 July 2011 225 Romania s First Post Communist Decade From Iliescu to Iliescu Wilson Center Retrieved 17 October 2019 Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 13 October 2008 Romania Clears Ex President Of Murder Charges RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 17 October 2019 Ion Iliescu Romania s ex leader charged with crimes against humanity BBC News 8 April 2019 Retrieved 20 May 2023 Dosarul Revoluției in care Ion Iliescu e acuzat de infracțiuni impotriva umanității a fost restituit de ICCJ la Parchetul Militar www digi24 ro in Romanian No 22 June 2020 Retrieved 27 August 2021 Parties amp Organisations Progressive Alliance Retrieved 22 July 2019 Full list of member parties and organisations Socialist International Retrieved 22 July 2019 Parties Map Archived from the original on 18 December 2019 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Alegeri cu un singur candidat 530 000 de membri PSD sunt așteptați la urne 10 October 2015 a b c Partidul Social Democrat Partide Politica Romanească www politicaromaneasca ro Retrieved 3 February 2023 a b Necșuțu Mădălin 28 August 2020 Romanian Government to be Tested by No Confidence Motion Balkan Insight Retrieved 5 November 2021 a b Necșuțu Mădălin 5 October 2021 Romanian Government Ousted by No Confidence Vote Balkan Insight Retrieved 5 November 2021 După 90 FSN devine Partidul Democrat dupa90 ro in Romanian Retrieved 3 February 2023 După 90 Convenția FDSN dupa90 ro in Romanian Retrieved 3 February 2023 După 90 Conferința Națională a Frontului Democrat al Salvării Naționale dupa90 ro in Romanian Retrieved 3 February 2023 Arhiva de 27 September 2017 Un sfert de secol de la alegerile care au adus la Guvernare patrulaterul rosu POVESTEA UNEI FOTOGRAFII evz ro in Romanian Retrieved 3 February 2023 Romania s PSD and PC form alliance SETimes com setimes com 17 April 2008 Archived from the original on 7 June 2008 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Zhang 6 February 2011 Romanian Oppositions Form Alliance CRIENGLISH Archived from the original on 29 June 2012 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Bivol Alex 25 February 2014 Romania s Liberals to leave ruling coalition government The Sofia Globe Retrieved 17 October 2019 European Socialists freeze relations with Romanian ruling party Romania Insider 12 April 2019 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Hegedus Daniel 2 December 2019 Loss for Romania s Social Democrats Is a Win for Europe s Left Balkan Insight Retrieved 17 October 2021 Stroe Daniel 24 August 2020 Romania Ciolacu elected PSD President Independent Balkan News Agency Archived from the original on 5 November 2021 Retrieved 5 November 2021 PSD mesaj pentru USR PLUS puteți bate campii oricat vom vota orice moțiune de cenzură PSD message for USR PLUS you can beat the plains no matter how much we will vote any no confidence motion Digi24 in Romanian 3 September 2021 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Romania s centrist PM faces no confidence vote on Oct 5 Reuters 28 September 2021 Retrieved 5 November 2021 Duțulescu Adriana 4 November 2021 Surse Ce au discutat liderii PNL și PSD și cum au ajuns aproape să bată palma pentru o guvernare de 7 ani Sources What the PNL and PSD leaders discussed and how they came close for a 7 year government agreement Digi24 in Romanian Retrieved 5 November 2021 PNL și PSD imping Romania către un regim autoritar Amendamentul surpriză din legea anti ONG folosit impotriva presei Ne ducem intr o direcție foarte periculoasă 20 February 2023 Degradare accelerată și fără precedent a democrației in regimul Iohannis Ciucă Romania e redusă la tăcere PNL se PSD izează rapid 29 June 2022 PDM ul lui Plahotniuc a ajuns PSDE Ciolacu Aici este resursa cea mai importantă care face puntea dintre DVS și romani 21 November 2022 Președintele PSD Liviu Dragnea PSD este cel mai mare partid de stanga din Europa Se dorește o contraofensivă la Ungaria cu o țară unde guvernul e de stanga 24 September 2018 Partidul lui Dacian Ciolos se poziţionează la centru stanga E prima provocare pentru electoratul clasic al PSD 31 March 2018 Top 30 partide politice din Romania 10 October 2021 Partiti elezioni e mobilitazione politica nella romania post comunista 1989 2000 Regione Toscana PSD fuzioneaza cu PSM 5 July 2003 Tovarasii string rindurile gt EVZ ro www evz ro Archived from the original on 5 July 2013 Retrieved 3 February 2022 a b Gurzu Anca 13 March 2019 Romania s rulers take Euroskeptic turn Politico Retrieved 17 October 2019 Romania Europe Elects 17 May 2018 Retrieved 17 October 2019 a b Gilet Kit 30 December 2018 Romania Fighting the E U Prepares to Lead It The New York Times Retrieved 17 October 2019 a b Gherghina Sergiu 25 February 2019 Friends or Foes Romania and the Council Presidency Europa Nu Retrieved 17 October 2019 Val de atacuri ale lui Dragnea la adresa UE Noi nu am fost coloniști Problema e că vin peste noi Digi24 in Romanian 12 April 2019 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Romania Europe Elects 2021 Retrieved 23 October 2021 a b Familia Politica traditionala sau un referendum pentru rebranduirea PSD si PNL 30 September 2018 Exclusiv Adrian Năstase Cum a Intrat Romania In Nato Și Ue Fără Să Supere Rusia Ce Avantaje Am Ratat la Zece Ani de la Tratatul de Aderare la Ue 28 April 2015 BBC in limba romană Forum Fostul președinte Ion Iliescu Uniunea Europeană nu poate fi țap ispășitor pentru egoismul si iresponsabilitatea unor lideri politici de la București sau de la Bruxelles 13 January 2019 10 ani in UE Ion Iliescu Succesul UE vital pentru reducerea decalajelor care separă Romania de Occident www digi24 ro January 2017 Romanian Senate adopts referendum for traditional family Romania Insider 12 September 2018 Retrieved 23 October 2021 PSD aduce artileria grea Biserica Ortodoxă e aruncată in lupta electorală Decalog pentru enoriașii alegători Ziaristii in Romanian 10 November 2020 Retrieved 23 October 2021 Ciobanu Claudia 6 October 2017 Romania turns illiberal with moves against gay marriage Politico Retrieved 23 October 2021 Rumanien fuhrt Steuer gegen Gier ein Deutsche Welle 22 December 2018 Retrieved 18 February 2019 Bossart Marco Kauffmann 21 February 2018 Rumaniens Justiz im Belagerungszustand Neue Zurcher Zeitung in German Retrieved 17 October 2019 Melenciuc Sorin 30 May 2018 BR Analysis Money to spend only on wages and pensions Romania s social spending enters danger zone above 60 pct of total budget limiting room for response in case of economic downturn Business Review Retrieved 17 October 2019 2018 budget Romania s Govt plans to increase spending by 12 next year Romania Insider 4 December 2017 Retrieved 17 October 2019 a b Poenaru Florin 2017 Locuri comune clasă anticomunism stanga Editura Tact ISBN 978 606 8437 84 2 apud Cistelecan Alex 29 May 2017 Materialismul evanescent revistavatra org in Romanian Retrieved 4 December 2018 Pleșu Andrei Pătrășconiu Cristian 31 August 2010 Orice doctrină devine periculoasă cand se transformă in ideologie Revista 22 PLUS in Romanian 301 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Ion Cristoiu Iohannis a impus o atitudine de ură faţă de Biserică pentru a castiga din electoratul USRPLUS Mediafax ro La Roumanie sur la voie de la Hongrie et de la Pologne Le Monde fr 31 December 2018 Ioan Stanomir La Roumanie a un grand probleme d amnesie La Croix 9 March 2017 Sef PSD Diaspora Nu trebuie să primim refugiaţi www digi24 ro 9 September 2015 Ana Birchall PSD Cotele obligatorii de distribuire a imigranţilor ar fi o mare greseală 8 September 2015 Dragnea Parca nu as vrea sa vad mii de imigranti pe strazile Bucurestiului Rumanien startet EU Ratsvorsitz mit neuer Attacke gegen Justizsystem 27 December 2018 Ciolacu intre patriotismul economic și ajutorul divin DW 13 06 2023 Deutsche Welle https revista22 ro opinii andrei cornea este psd un partid social democrat Dragnea vrea să lanseze o dezbatere despre legiferarea parteneriatului civil E o minoritate pe care nu ne putem face că nu o vedem sau că nu există Dragnea despre proiectul Legii pentru parteneriatul civil Eventual facem referendum Moldova Europa Liberă 7 May 2018 Liviu Dragnea Parteneriatul civil intre persoanele de același sex trebuie legiferat in Romania Radio Europa Liberă in Romanian Ordonanța de urgență nr 89 2001 pentru modificarea și completarea unor dispoziții din Codul penal referitoare la infracțiuni privind viața sexuală Archived 20 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine text published in the Official Gazette of Romania Voichița Năchescu 22 May 2014 Hierarchies of Difference National Identity Gay and Lesbian Rights and the Church in Postcommunist Romania Sexuality and Gender in Postcommunist Eastern Europe and Russia Routledge p 58 ISBN 978 1 317 95559 7 http www revistadesociologie ro pdf uri nr3 4 2011 02 VAndreescu pdf Marcel Ciolacu despre decizia CEDO referitoare la parteneriatul civil Nu este pregătită societatea romanească Europa FM 23 November 2023 Ciolacu despre decizia CEDO referitoare la parteneriatul civil intre persoane de acelasi sex Societatea romanească incă nu e pregătită Nu este nici prima nici ultima care condamnă 23 November 2023 Biserica Ortodoxa Romana AGENT ELECTORAL AL PSD Decaderea morala a bisericii conduse de Patriarhul Daniel www revista22 ro Archived from the original on 9 September 2018 Retrieved 12 January 2022 ALIANȚA BOR PSD Operațiunea bani și imobile pentru Biserică contra voturi pro Ponta 13 November 2014 Biserica Ortodoxă se implică in campania electorală Mitropolitul Ardealului indeamnă enoriașii să voteze doar cu PSD sau ALDE VIDEO December 2016 Dragnea despre impozitarea veniturilor Bisericii Nu susţin Cel puţin să le ajutăm să existe Gandul Sfantul profit al Bisericii Ortodoxe Ce excedent au declarat la Finanţe eparhiile BOR Mediafax ro Firea da inca 10 milioane de lei pentru Catedrala Mantuirii Neamului Vezi de unde se iau bani la rectificarea bugetara si unde se duc Ziare com Mihăilescu Robert 3 December 2009 Ion Caramitru demisioneaza din conducerea PNTCD Sefii PSD fosti nomenclaturisti sau copiii lor sunt tarati de originea comunista Nu cred in moartea comunismului prin comunisti HotNewsRo Retrieved 10 June 2015 Romania ex leader in 1990 deaths case BBC News 21 October 2015 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Alarming attempts to undermine Romanian democracy Nobbling the nobblers The Economist 8 February 2018 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Ilie Luiza 10 May 2018 Bucharest court acquits former Romanian PM in graft case Reuters Retrieved 17 October 2019 Adrian Nastase s a autosuspendat din conducerea PSD HotNewsRo 16 January 2006 Retrieved 10 June 2015 Banches Ovidiu 17 August 2005 Geoana stenogramele si reformarea PSD 9AM Retrieved 10 June 2015 Felul in care PSD a făcut jocurile Rusiei din 1989 incoace reflectat de un expert in securitate națională 10 august 2018 parte din planul ex PCR ului care ne conduce 28 October 2019 Shafir Michael 2004 Memories Memorials and Membership Romanian Utilitarian Anti Semitism and Marshal Antonescu Romania Since 1989 Politics Economics and Society Lexington Books p 71 Romanian MP stirs outcry with Holocaust comment European Jewish Press 7 March 2012 Archived from the original on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 7 March 2012 Elie Wiesel Institute in Romania criticizes Senator Sova for statements made on a TV channel actmedia eu Retrieved 7 March 2012 permanent dead link Sozi Chef Ponta enthebt Parteisprecher Sova zeitweilig des Amtes wegen Holocaust Leugnung in German punkto ro Retrieved 7 March 2012 permanent dead link Romania Proposed reforms could undermine independence of judges and prosecutors according to Venice Commission coe int 13 July 2018 Archived from the original on 19 July 2018 Retrieved 17 October 2019 Carmen Paun 22 January 2017 Romanians protest government plan to commute sentences Politico Ilie Luiza 10 February 2017 We see you Romanian activists become potent political force Reuters Retrieved 24 October 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Social Democratic Party Romania Official website 44 27 40 46 N 26 4 52 85 E 44 4612389 N 26 0813472 E 44 4612389 26 0813472 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social Democratic Party Romania amp oldid 1220363977, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.