Moldova’s president vows to fight on as top court stymies hope for new election
Moldova’s top court strikes a blow to President Maia Sandu’s hopes of dissolving parliament and calling a parliamentary election, deepening the political crisis in a country that has been without a government since December.
Moldova’s political crisis deepened on February 23 when the
country’s top court ruled that the president, Maia Sandu, had acted
unconstitutionally by twice nominating Natalia Gavriliță, a former finance
minister, to be the country’s next prime minister.
The court said in its reasoning that Sandu should have
accepted a proposal from 54 MPs (primarily from the Socialist party; PSRM) to
instead nominate Mariana Durleșteanu, a former Moldovan ambassador to the UK.
Sandu has twice nominated Gavriliță, who has little hope of
forming a government that would gain the support of a majority of Moldova’s 101
MPs, in order to force an early election. Sandu can dissolve parliament if it
twice fails to approve a new executive.
Possible suspension
According to the court’s ruling, Sandu is now obliged to
organise a new round of formal consultations with Moldova’s parliamentary
parties. If the PSRM and its allies again put forward Durleșteanu as prime
minister (or anyone else who can command a majority in parliament), she will be
forced to accept the proposal. Not doing so could see her suspended.
In a televised statement, however, Sandu appeared to suggest
that she will stand her ground.
“I have said repeatedly that the only way for Moldova to
move forward is to organise new parliamentary elections,” she said.
“I have promised the people that I will reform this country,
reform the justice system, and fight corruption. That is why they voted for me.
I call on all of those MPs who have not been bought by mafia clans to show
courage: the courage to realise that we need a new election, because nothing
good can ever come from the current parliament.”
Moldova has been without a prime minister since Ion Chicu
resigned on December 23 last year, just hours before parliament was due to vote
on a no-confidence motion, and only a day before Sandu took office.
The Harvard-educated Ms Sandu, erstwhile leader of the
Action and Solidarity party (PAS), defeated the incumbent president Igor Dodon,
backed by the PSRM, in a presidential election on November 15.
Chicu’s government was a shaky coalition of two centre-left
parties, the PSRM and the Democratic party, formerly led by the oligarch Vlad
Plahotniuc, who is currently fighting extradition to Moldova from the US on
corruption charges. The coalition – which took office in November 2019 – could
count on the support of just 51 MPs.
Polls point to PAS majority
Long viewed by the international media, in somewhat
simplistic terms, as “pro-European” (as opposed to Mr Dodon, who favours closer
ties with Russia), Sandu centered her presidential campaign on eradicating poverty
and fighting the corruption that has done so much damage to the economy of what
remains Europe’s poorest country.
In October 2020, the Council of Europe’s anti-corruption
body, GRECO, condemned Moldova for making little progress in the fight against high-level
corruption, saying that measures taken in recent years were “clearly
insufficient”.
Sandu has also pledged to renew Moldova’s European
aspirations, although the make-up of Moldova’s current parliament is not in her
favour.
PAS has just 15 seats, although the latest opinion poll,
released on February 22, suggests that it would be close to gaining an outright
majority should an election be held, with support at an all-time high of 48.6
per cent.
Moldova is not however scheduled to hold another parliamentary
election until 2023, hence Ms Sandu’s desire to dissolve parliament and call an
early vote.
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