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Romania’s two largest parties call no-confidence vote in pro-European government

By Thomson Reuters Apr 28, 2026 | 10:55 AM

BUCHAREST, April 28 (Reuters) – The minority government of Romania’s pro-European Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan could fall in early May after his former coalition partner, the leftist Social Democrats, and ​the far-right opposition submitted a no-confidence motion on Tuesday.

The coalition’s ‌collapse raised the prospect of weeks or months of policy deadlock that could put pressure on Romania’s debt yields, credit ratings and access to European Union funds as talks are held on a new parliamentary majority.

Social Democrat ministers quit ‌the ​government last week, but the reform-minded Bolojan ⁠refused to step down, ⁠saying the government had vital reforms to implement to tap more than 10 billion euros’ ($12 billion) worth of pandemic recovery and resilience funds before the EU’s August deadline.

Romania must also further lower ​the EU’s largest budget deficit – to 6.2% of economic output this year from over 9% in 2024 – or risk losing its ⁠investment grade rating.

Romania’s largest employers’ association Concordia ⁠said on Tuesday losing the rating would cost ​Romania 100 billion lei ($23 billion) in higher debt costs over five years.

While ​the Social Democrats (PSD), parliament’s biggest party, without which a pro-EU ‌majority cannot be attained, have repeatedly said they are willing to rejoin the same pro-European party cluster with a different prime minister, the other parties have said they will not collaborate with the ⁠PSD again.

The PSD has teamed up with the hard-right Alliance for Uniting Romanians (AUR) for a no-confidence motion but the party’s leader has denied any ⁠plan to collaborate with ‌AUR beyond the May 5 no-confidence vote.

If Bolojan ⁠survives, he will still need to seek a ​new ‌confidence vote within 45 days, when the mandate ​of the interim ⁠replacements for the PSD ministers who have quit expires.

If the government collapses, centrist President Nicusor Dan, who nominates the prime minister, is widely expected to attempt to rebuild the four-party pro-EU coalition with a different Liberal or a technocrat as prime minister.

(Reporting by Luiza Ilie; Editing ​by Jon Boyle)