President of Romania explained

Post:President
Body:Romania
Native Name:Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Președintele României
Insignia:Flag of the President of Romania.svg
Insigniasize:125px
Insigniacaption:Standard of the president of Romania
Incumbent:Klaus Iohannis
Incumbentsince:21 December 2014
Style:
Status:Head of State
Member Of:Supreme Council of National Defence
European Council
Appointer:Popular vote
Residence:Cotroceni Palace
Termlength:Five years, renewable once
Formation:28 March 19748 December 1991 (current form)
Deputy:President of the Senate
Salary:27,000 lei per month (~ 66,800 annual)[1]
Website:Președintele României

The president of Romania (Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Președintele României) is the head of state of Romania. It is directly elected by a two-round system, and, following a modification to the Romanian Constitution in 2003, serves for five years. An individual may serve two terms that may be consecutive. During their term in office, the president may not be a formal member of a political party. The president of Romania is the supreme commander of the Romanian Armed Forces.

The office of president was created in 1974, when communist leader Nicolae Ceaușescu elevated the presidency of the State Council to a fully fledged executive presidency. It took its current form in stages after the Romanian Revolution, culminating in the adoption of Romania's current constitution in 1991.

Klaus Iohannis is the incumbent president since his inauguration on 21 December 2014. Iohannis is of full Transylvanian Saxon ethnicity/descent, making him the first president from Romania's German minority.

Communist era

In the Communist era, the president was elected for a five-year term by the Great National Assembly (GNA) on the recommendation of the Romanian Communist Party's Central Committee and the Front of Socialist Unity and Democracy, with no term limits. Ceaușescu was the only holder of the office under this system; he was elected by the GNA in 1974 and reelected in 1980 and 1985, each time unopposed. The president continued to serve as ex officio president of the State Council, and had the right to act on any matter that did not require a State Council plenum. He also appointed and dismissed ministers and heads of central agencies. When the GNA was not in session (in practice, for most of the year), the president could appoint and dismiss the president of the Supreme Court and the prosecutor general without State Council's approval; indeed, he was not even required to consult his State Council colleagues when making such decisions. Ceaușescu created the office in order to make himself chief decision-maker in both name and fact. Previously, he had nominally been first among equals on the State Council, deriving his real power from his leadership of the Communist Party. In practice, he used his power to act on all matters that did not require a plenum to rule by decree. Over time, he also usurped many powers that constitutionally belonged to the State Council as a whole.

Oath of office

After the Constitutional Court acknowledges the legality of the election, the Houses of Parliament meet in a joint session. The elected President takes the following oath of office, specified by article 82 of the Constitution:

Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Jur să-mi dăruiesc toată puterea și priceperea pentru propășirea spirituală și materială a poporului român, să respect Constituția și legile țării, să apăr democrația, drepturile și libertățile fundamentale ale cetățenilor, suveranitatea, independența, unitatea și integritatea teritorială a României. Așa să-mi ajute Dumnezeu!

I solemnly swear that I will dedicate all my strength and the best of my ability for the spiritual and material welfare of the Romanian people, to abide by the Constitution and laws of the country, to defend democracy, the fundamental rights and freedoms of my fellow-citizens, Romania's sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity. So help me God![2]

Powers and duties

Under the 1991 Constitution, which was amended in 2003, presidential powers were curtailed in contrast to communist Romania; the office continues to wield significant influence within a semi-presidential system of government.

The president's duties are set out in Title III, Chapter II of the Constitution.[3] These are not exclusive, and are supplemented by other constitutional and legal provisions.

In home affairs:

In foreign affairs:

In defence issues:

Other duties:

In the exercise of his functions, the president issues decrees. Decrees issued under Article 91 (1) and (2), Article 92 (2) and (3), Article 93 (1), and Article 94 a), b) and d) of the Constitution must be countersigned by the Prime Minister in order to take effect.

Impeachment

An incumbent president who severely violates the Constitution may be suspended by the Parliament in joint session. If the suspension motion passes, there is a call for a referendum of impeachment within no more than 30 days from the suspension.

If the Senate and Chamber of Deputies, in joint session, accuse the president of high treason, the president is suspended from powers and duties by right. The accusations are judged by the High Court of Cassation and Justice. The incumbent president is dismissed by right if found guilty of high treason.

History

The suspension and impeachment procedure has been implemented three times. The first time regarded President Ion Iliescu, following a statement regarding the returning of the illegally confiscated properties during the years of the Socialist Republic of Romania to the original owners or their heirs. This first attempt in 1995 did not pass the vote in Parliament.

The second attempt was successful, with the person suspended being Traian Băsescu, in office as of April 2007. He became the first president to successfully be suspended and also the first to face an impeachment vote before the people, regarding issues with supposed unconstitutional acts. The impeachment plebiscite was held on 19 May 2007, and Băsescu survived the impeachment attempt. The result was the rejection of the proposal by 24.94% in favor to 75.06% opposed.

The third attempt lead to a second successful suspension in July 2012, again against Traian Băsescu. The referendum was held on 29 July 2012, and the results were 88.7% in favor and 11.3% opposed, with voter turnout calculated to be 46.24%; below the 50% + one vote threshold required at the time the referendum was held. The Constitutional Court did not give a verdict on the validation of the referendum at the time, citing irregularities in the permanent electoral lists. On 21 August, the Court deemed the referendum invalid, and again Băsescu prevailed from being ousted.

Succession

Should the office of the president become vacant due to resignation, impeachment, permanent inability to perform the duties of office, or death while in office,[7] the president of the Senate or the president of the Chamber of Deputies, in that order, step in as Ad Interim President of Romania[8] (Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: Președinte Interimar al României). Neither relinquish their position as president of their respective Legislative House for the duration of the ad interim term. An ad interim president cannot address the Parliament, dissolve the Parliament, nor call for a referendum (the impeachment referendum after a motion of suspension is called by Parliament). The vacancy of the office cannot be longer than three months.[9] While the president is suspended, the office is not considered vacant.

List

See main article: List of presidents of Romania.

Latest election

See main article: 2019 Romanian presidential election.

CandidatePartyFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
align=left Klaus Iohannisalign=left National Liberal Party3,485,29237.826,509,13566.09
Viorica DăncilăSocial Democratic Party2,051,72522.263,339,92233.91
Dan Barna2020 USR-PLUS Alliance1,384,45015.02
Mircea DiaconuAlliance for "One Man" (PROALDE)815,2018.85
Theodor PaleologuPeople's Movement Party527,0985.72
Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania357,0143.87
Ramona BruynseelsHumanist Power Party244,2752.65
Alexandru CumpănașuIndependent141,3161.53
Viorel CataramăLiberal Right Party48,6620.53
Bogdan StanoeviciIndependent39,1920.42
Cătălin IvanAlternative for National Dignity32,7870.36
Ninel PeiaRomanian Nationhood Party30,8840.34
Sebastian PopescuNew Romania Party30,8500.33
John Ion BanuRomanian Nation Party27,7690.30
Invalid/blank votes142,961182,648
Total9,359,67310010,031,705100
align=left colspan=3Registered voters/turnout18,286,86551.1818,217,41155.07
align=left colspan=7Sources: BEC (first round); BEC (second round)

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cât vor câștiga Iohannis și Ponta după majorarea salariilor demnitarilor. Ziare.com. 8 July 2015 . ro.
  2. Constitution of 1991, as revised in 2003 "Article 82: Validation of mandate and oath-taking", retrieved on 7 July 2012
  3. Web site: CONSTITUTION OF ROMANIA. www.cdep.ro.
  4. Art. 63, (3) of the Constitution
  5. Art. 66, (2) of the Constitution
  6. Constitutional Court Decision No. 682 (27 June 2012) https://web.archive.org/web/20160321182832/https://www.ccr.ro/files/products/D0682_12.pdf
  7. Constitution of 1991, as revised in 2003 "Article 97: Vacancy of office", retrieved on 11 April 2010
  8. Constitution of 1991, as revised in 2003 "Article 98: Interim of office", retrieved on 11 April 2010
  9. Constitution of 1991, as revised in 2003 "Article 97: Vacancy of office; paragraph (2)", retrieved on 22 August 2012