PNL re-elects Bolojan, bars PSD ties, and eyes USR-UDMR alliance

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7 days · 11 summary articles
The extraordinary congress of Romania’s National Liberal Party (PNL) on Sunday reconfirmed Ilie Bolojan as party leader, granting him a four-year mandate that extends beyond the 2030 presidential election and positioning him as a direct competitor to Bucharest mayor Nicușor Dan. The 1,886 delegates gathered at Romexpo in Bucharest voted unanimously to reject calls for the resignation of five prominent party members—Rareș Bogdan, Lucian Bode, Hubert Thuma, Alina Gorghiu, and Adrian Veștea—while also approving a new leadership slate and a statute amendment that bars future collaboration with the Social Democratic Party (PSD).
Bolojan’s victory solidifies his authority within PNL, but the congress also exposed deep internal divisions. Ciprian Ciucu, Bucharest’s mayor, accused unnamed power centres of orchestrating “special operations” against the party, singling out supporters of Veștea, the prime minister-designate, whom Ciucu claimed “does not belong to himself.” Rareș Bogdan, an MEP, went further, warning that PNL risked becoming “the servant of USR,” the centre-right reformist party, and dismissing Bolojan as an “inept but aggressive and stubborn prankster.”
The congress also adopted a contingency plan: if Veștea’s proposed government fails to secure parliamentary investiture, PNL will seek a governing alliance with USR and the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR). Bolojan confirmed this “honest, transparent formula” in a message to Dan, emphasising that the three parties had already outlined a joint approach.
Gorghiu, one of the five targeted members, condemned the congress’s decision as “abusive,” arguing that free expression cannot be treated as a disciplinary offence. She accused Bolojan of fearing a liberal prime minister in Parliament, while Veștea, speaking just before the congress began, announced Florin Zaharia as his proposed minister for European Investments and Projects, stressing the urgency of forming a government to ensure continued EU funding.
Political analyst Stelian Tănase, addressing the congress, praised PNL’s response to what he described as “aggression from Cotroceni and Kiseleff 10”—a reference to the presidential administration and PSD headquarters—calling it a rare moment of defiance in Romanian politics.
With Veștea’s government now awaiting a confidence vote, the PNL congress has reshaped the political landscape, granting Bolojan a strengthened mandate but leaving the party fractured and its future alliances uncertain.
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