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Sorin Grindeanu

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Sorin Grindeanu
Grindeanu in 2018
President of the Chamber of Deputies
Acting
2 November 2021 – 23 November 2021
PresidentKlaus Iohannis
Preceded byFlorin Roman (Acting)
Succeeded byMarcel Ciolacu
Prime Minister of Romania
In office
4 January 2017 – 29 June 2017
PresidentKlaus Iohannis
Preceded byDacian Cioloș
Succeeded byMihai Tudose
Deputy Prime Minister of Romania
In office
25 November 2021 – 15 June 2023
Serving with Hunor Kelemen
PresidentKlaus Iohannis
Prime MinisterNicolae Ciucă
Preceded byDan Barna
Succeeded by
Minister of Transport and Infrastructure
Assumed office
25 November 2021
Prime Minister
Preceded byDan Vîlceanu (Acting)
Minister of Communications
In office
17 December 2014 – 17 November 2015
Prime MinisterVictor Ponta
Preceded byRăzvan Cotovelea
Succeeded byMarius Bostan
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Assumed office
21 December 2020
ConstituencyTimiș County
In office
19 December 2012 – 26 June 2016
ConstituencyTimiș County
President of the Timiș County Council
In office
26 June 2016 – 4 January 2017
Preceded byTitu Bojin
Succeeded byCălin-Ionel Dobra
Deputy Mayor of Timișoara
In office
June 2008 – December 2012
MayorGheorghe Ciuhandu
Member of the Local Council of Timișoara
In office
June 2004 – June 2008
MayorGheorghe Ciuhandu
Personal details
Born
Sorin Mihai Grindeanu

(1973-12-05) 5 December 1973 (age 50)
Caransebeș, Caraș-Severin County, Romania
Political partySocial Democratic Party
SpouseMihaela Grindeanu
Children2
Alma materWest University of Timișoara

Sorin Mihai Grindeanu (Romanian pronunciation: [soˈrin miˈhaj ɡrinˈde̯anu]; born 5 December 1973) is a Romanian politician who served as Prime Minister of Romania from January to June 2017 when he was removed by a motion of no confidence adopted by the Parliament. He served as ad interim President of the Chamber of Deputies in November 2021. He currently serves as Deputy Prime Minister of Romania since 25 November 2021 as a part of the Ciucă Cabinet, along with Hunor Kelemen.

Grindeanu was a member of the Chamber of Deputies from 2012 until the June 2016 local election, when he became president of the Timiș County Council.[1]

A member of the Social Democratic Party (PSD), he was nominated by the leader of the party, Liviu Dragnea, on 28 December 2016 to form a new government after the party won the legislative election of the previous year in a landslide. Two days later, President Klaus Iohannis officially appointed him as prime minister.[2][3] He assumed office on 4 January 2017. He was also Minister for Communications under the fourth cabinet of Victor Ponta, between 17 December 2014 and 17 November 2015.[4]

In early 2017, his government adopted a decree decriminalizing certain official misconduct, sparking widespread protests.[5]

Early life and studies

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Born on 5 December 1973, Grindeanu is the only child of Ana and Nicolae Grindeanu. Both of his parents were teachers, his father having been headmaster at the Colegiul Național "C.D. Loga", a high school in Caransebeș and a school inspector of the Caraș-Severin county. Nicolae Grindeanu also entered politics, having served as leader of the local organisation of the Social Democratic Party (PSD) in Caransebeș and currently serving a term as county councillor in the Caraș-Severin local council.[6]

Starting in 1992, Grindeanu attended the West University of Timișoara where he received a degree in Math and Informatics after graduating in 1997.[7] In 1999 he attended the University of Bologna for three months under a TEMPUS scholarship and received a degree in Social Statistics. He has also received degrees in various fields from the Institute for Adult Education in Frankfurt,[citation needed] University of Aveiro and the Leeds Beckett University.

In 2013 he received a postgraduate degree in Military Science, Information and Public Order from the National Intelligence Academy.[8]

Political career

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Grindeanu entered politics in November 1996 as a member of the Partidul Democrației Sociale din România (Party of Social Democracy of Romania), which would be later renamed the Social Democratic Party, following its merger with another minor left-wing party and becoming a member of the Socialist International. Two years later, in October 1998, he became Vice President of the Youth Organisation of the party in Timiș and in October 2002 he was promoted to the county executive bureau of the party. Throughout the early 2000s he continued to climb the ranks of the party, becoming a prominent member of the local organisation in Timiș and its president in December 2003.[9] He made his entry into national politics in 2012 when he was elected for a four-years term as deputy in the Parliament of Romania. As MP, Grindeanu has co-authored several legislative initiatives on the fiscal code, social dialogue, the Labour Code, the functioning of owners' associations, individual insolvency, energy and gas laws or credit contracts for consumers.[7] He has also supported a proposal for the chemical castration of those accused of paedophilia.[7]

Grindeanu was appointed Minister of Communications on 17 December 2014 as part of the Ponta Cabinet, a position he held until the latter's resignation on 5 November 2015 and the subsequent dissolution of his government on 17 November 2015.[10]

On 30 June 2016, Grindeanu resigned as MP to return to his home county of Timiș, where he was elected President of the local county council as part of a deal between the social-democrats, PMP, and ALDE.

As prime minister

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Appointment

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Following the electoral victory of the Social Democratic Party in the legislative election, Liviu Dragnea, the party's leader was set to become the next prime minister after he secured an alliance with former PM Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu's party and formed a parliamentary coalition. As per the Romanian constitution, after a legislative election, the President of Romania, after consulting all the parties in Parliament, has to designate an individual proposed by the coalition or the party that has an absolute majority in Parliament to become the next prime minister. President Iohannis had said before and after the election that he would not appoint an individual that was either prosecuted or convicted before, alluding to Dragnea's two-year suspended sentence in a case of electoral fraud. After exhausting all possible ways of removing his sentence, Dragnea decided to stop pursuing the premiership and nominated Sevil Shhaideh for the position.[11] President Iohannis, however, refused to nominate Shhaideh, did not offer a reason for his refusal, and requested that the leaders of the majority coalition make another proposal.[12] Had she been designated and sworn into office, Shhaideh would have been the first woman PM, the first PM from an ethnic minority and also the first PM from a religious minority.

Following the refusal, Dragnea mentioned a possible impeachment of the president, but ultimately decided to make another nomination. Grindeanu became the coalition's second proposal. President Iohannis designated Grindeanu as prime minister on 30 December 2016 and he was finally sworn in on 4 January 2017.

Ordinance Bill No. 13

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Early into his premiership, Grindeanu was faced with widespread protests all over the country after his government proposed an ordinance bill regarding the pardoning of certain committed crimes, and the amendment of the Penal Code of Romania to decriminalise abuse of power if the amount of money stolen was less than 200.000 RON.[13] Despite the negative reactions from both the judicial institutions and the public, the newly sworn in government[14] approved an ordinance modifying the Penal Code and Penal Procedure Code during the night of 31 January. Soon after a government meeting, the Ministry of Justice published the bills on its website and sent them to the relevant judicial institutions for consultations. The government's main stated reason for these bills was that prisons were overcrowded and in order to avoid paying a fine to the European Court of Human Rights, such measures were needed to improve the conditions in prisons.[15] [16] Opponents raised accusations that the ordinance was intended for decriminalisation of government corruption, and to help hundreds of current and former politicians to escape ongoing criminal investigations or prison sentences.[17] Over the span of a few days, the protests had become the largest since the Romanian Revolution of 1989, with the number of protesters on the streets of Bucharest peaking to 600,000 on 5 February 2017. This prompted Grindeanu and his government to repeal the ordinance, and the Minister of Justice, Florin Iordache resigned on 9 February 2017.[18]

Loss of political support

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The relationship between Dragnea and Grindeanu slowly deteriorated starting April 2017 with sources pointing to the lack of trust between the two, the former believing the latter was interesting in creating a power pole in order to challenge his leadership. Dragnea later asked for Grindeanu's resignation as prime minister, which the latter refused.[19] As a consequence, Dragnea convened the executive committee of the Social Democratic Party in order to review the cabinet's implementation of the governing programme with which the party won the legislative election back in 2016. Before the committee came to its conclusion, ALDE had already withdrawn its support of Grindeanu's Cabinet. Soon after Dragnea and PSD also withdrew their support and all the ministers resigned, leaving only Grindeanu as part of the government. Grindeanu refused to resign, citing his responsibility as Prime Minister of Romania. The coalition is expected to start a motion of no confidence against their own government in order to force Grindeanu out, sometime during June.[20]

On 15 June 2017, Grindeanu was excluded from the Social Democratic Party by the executive committee of the PSD.[21] Following Grindeanu's exclusion from the party, wings of the party and certain local organisations (Timiș[22] and Iași[23]) have declared their support for Grindeanu and former PM, Victor Ponta also joined his government as general secretary[24] in spite of Dragnea's threats of exclusion from the party against all those who would abstain or vote against the motion of no confidence.[25] On 21 June 2017, the motion of no confidence was passed by Parliament with 241 votes (233 were needed), thus ending Grindeanu's premiership.[26]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Sorin Grindeanu, noul premier al României". Mediafax (in Romanian). 30 December 2016. Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  2. ^ "Romania gets new PM Sorin Grindeanu, ending political turmoil". The Indian Express. 30 December 2016. Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  3. ^ "Romania: Veteran leftist Sorin Grindeanu named PM-designate". euronews. 30 December 2016. Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  4. ^ "Romanian Party Makes New Pick for Premier to Avert Crisis". Bloomberg.com. 28 December 2016. Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  5. ^ "Protesters in Romania denounce plan to decriminalise misconduct offences". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  6. ^ "Consilieri județeni". Consiliul Județean Caraș-Severin (in Romanian).
  7. ^ a b c "BIOGRAFIE: Sorin Grindeanu, propus ministru al Comunicațiilor, a absolvit informatica și este fostul viceprimar al Timișoarei". Mediafax (in Romanian). 2014.
  8. ^ "BIOGRAFIE: Sorin Grindeanu, noul premier al României. A urmat un curs la Academia Națională de Informații, a fost membru în Comisia de control a SRI / Ce avere are". Mediafax (in Romanian). 2016.
  9. ^ "Sorin Grindeanu, prim-ministru desemnat (fișă biografică)". Agerpres (in Romanian). 2017.
  10. ^ "Guvernul Ponta 4, prezentat în plenul Parlamentului la ora 18:00. Lista noilor miniștri". Jurnalul Național (in Romanian). 2014. Archived from the original on 19 April 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  11. ^ "Sevil Shhaideh este nominalizarea PSD pentru funcția de Prim Ministru". Digi24 (in Romanian). 2016.
  12. ^ "VIDEO UPDATE Președintele Iohannis: Am decis să nu accept propunerea ca Sevil Shhaideh să fie prim-ministru – AGERPRES" (in Romanian). Agerpres.ro. 27 December 2016. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  13. ^ Carmen Paun (22 January 2017). "Romanians protest government plan to commute sentences". Politico.
  14. ^ de Costin Ionescu (31 January 2017). "Romanian government secretly adopts emergency ordinances critics say undermine fight against corruption". HotNews.ro.
  15. ^ "Thousands march against prison pardons in Romania". Guardian. Associated Press. 22 January 2017.
  16. ^ Carmen Paun (22 January 2017). "Romanians protest government plan to commute sentences". Politico.
  17. ^ "Nucleara din justitie. Lista potentialilor beneficiari ai dezincriminarii mascate a abuzului in serviciu". HotNewsRo (in Romanian). Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  18. ^ George Sîrbu (8 February 2017). "Iordache si-a dat demisia din functia de ministru al Justitiei: Toate initiativele asumate sunt legale si constitutionale / Pentru opinia publica nu a fost suficient". HotNews (in Romanian).
  19. ^ "Dragnea i-ar fi cerut demisia premierului Grindeanu". ProTV (in Romanian). 8 February 2017.
  20. ^ "PSD-ALDE inițiază moțiune de cenzură împotriva propriului Guvern". Digi24 (in Romanian). 2017.
  21. ^ "Sorin Grindeanu exclus din PSD". HotNews (in Romanian). 2017.
  22. ^ "Conducerea PSD Timiș îl susține pe Grindeanu". Ziua de Vest (in Romanian). 2017.
  23. ^ "PSD Iași îl susține pe Grindeanu". Mediafax (in Romanian). 2017.
  24. ^ "Victor Ponta intră în guvernul Grindeanu". DCNews (in Romanian). 2017.
  25. ^ "Parlamentarii PSD excluși după moțiune, decizie ilegală". DCNews (in Romanian). 2017.
  26. ^ "Moțiunea de cenzură a trecut". Digi24 (in Romanian). 2017.
Political offices
Preceded by
Răzvan Cotovelea
Minister of Communications
2014–2015
Succeeded by
Marius Bostan
Preceded by Prime Minister of Romania
2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Transport and Infrastructure
2021–present
Incumbent