
15 days · 10 summary articles
Adrian Veștea, Romania’s designated prime minister, has withdrawn from the race for the National Liberal Party (PNL) leadership just one day before the party’s extraordinary congress, intensifying internal divisions ahead of Sunday’s vote. The announcement, made Friday evening, followed repeated calls from fellow PNL deputy Ștefan Stoica for Veștea to appear at the congress and defend his position. Stoica, speaking Saturday, questioned why Veștea was “running away” from the party’s decision-making process, urging him to let delegates determine the party’s future rather than dictate its direction from outside .
Veștea, who serves as PNL’s first vice-president, had initially signaled his intention to run for the party’s top position but reversed course Friday, citing concerns over the congress’s legitimacy. In a statement Saturday, he described the upcoming vote as a “simulacrum of democracy” that risks installing a “dictatorship within the party,” and vowed to pursue all legal avenues to contest the process, which he called “unstatutory and illegal” .
Meanwhile, PNL leader Ilie Bolojan confirmed Saturday that he will submit his candidacy for the party presidency by 5:00 p.m., as the party holds a technical session at Romexpo ahead of Sunday’s congress. The gathering will also include revisions to the party’s statutes, setting the stage for a potentially contentious leadership contest .
In a parallel development, Veștea met Saturday with Luca Niculescu, his designated foreign minister, to finalize the government’s program and discuss Romania’s strategic goal of joining the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Veștea framed OECD accession as the country’s “third major external anchor” after EU and NATO membership, emphasizing its importance for Romania’s long-term economic and geopolitical positioning .
The political turbulence comes as two prominent figures—interim Deputy Prime Minister Oana Gheorghiu and interim European Funds Minister Dragoș Pîslaru—formally joined PNL on Saturday, aligning themselves with Bolojan’s candidacy ahead of the congress . Their enrollment underscores the high stakes of Sunday’s vote, which will determine not only the party’s leadership but also the trajectory of Veștea’s proposed government agenda, including OECD accession and broader governance reforms.