logo
#

Latest news with #Bolojan

Romania to activate EU funds to help areas affected by flooding
Romania to activate EU funds to help areas affected by flooding

Euronews

time04-08-2025

  • Politics
  • Euronews

Romania to activate EU funds to help areas affected by flooding

Romania's government said on Monday that it will use an EU support package to help people affected by flash floods that left at least three people dead in the country's northeast. The aid consists of amounts between €3,000-6,000 per case, which will be granted after damage assessments have been carried out in the hard-hit counties of Neamt and Suceava, Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan said on Monday. Bucharest will also activate the EU Solidarity Fund, through which Romania can access hundreds of millions of euros for the reconstruction of the area, but this money will only arrive in a few months, Bolojan said. In Suceava alone, approximately €78 million is needed for the reconstruction of the city of Brosteni and other affected localities, according to the County Council. Romania's announcement was confirmed by Dragoș Pîslaru, Minister of Investments and European projects, who wrote on Facebook that the measure will put the European Regional Emergency Support to Reconstruction (RESTORE) mechanism to use for the first time. According to Pîslaru, RESTORE, which was created for cases of major natural disasters, will allow for the rapid allocation of millions of euros from European funds to the affected areas. At least three people were killed when torrential rainstorms hit Romania in late July, triggering flash floods in the northeast. Hundreds were forced to leave their homes as rescue services deployed in Neamt and Suceava. Some 680 homes were affected by the flash floods, which destroyed 41 houses, as well as the water and sewage network, according to local media reports. Residents, some trapped in their homes by flooding, were rescued by firefighters and helicopters. Authorities reported they evacuated about 890 people in the city of Neamt alone. Last September, at least 24 people were killed by Storm Boris after a massive wave of flooding hit Central Europe, causing widespread destruction in around five countries. The north-eastern Galați and Vaslui counties were the most affected by the flooding.

Romanian government survives no confidence vote and pushes tax hikes through
Romanian government survives no confidence vote and pushes tax hikes through

The Star

time14-07-2025

  • Business
  • The Star

Romanian government survives no confidence vote and pushes tax hikes through

FILE PHOTO: Romania's interim President Ilie Bolojan walks to attend a European Union summit in Brussels, Belgium March 20, 2025. REUTERS/Yves Herman/File Photo BUCHAREST (Reuters) -Romanian Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan's three-week old coalition government survived a no confidence vote on Monday, allowing it to push through unpopular tax hikes needed to lower the European Union's largest budget deficit. The government has fast-tracked through parliament an increase in value-added tax, excise duties and other levies from August to prevent a ratings downgrade to below investment level and to unblock access to EU funds. The broad coalition of four pro-European parties took power at the end of June, ending months of political deadlock after a presidential election was cancelled in December and was re-run in May. The parties have been reluctant to agree the hikes that have been criticised by employers and unionists while thousands of public sector workers have staged protests. The hard-right opposition filed Monday's no confidence motion and said it will file more. "I understand the opposition does not agree with the measures proposed by the government," Bolojan told lawmakers. "What then are the solutions? On the one hand we are told the problems in the economy are serious, on the other not to take these measures. We can't have both." While all four parties in the government approved the increases, the Social Democrats, the coalition's largest party without which a ruling majority cannot hold, criticised them on Monday. "For solid, continued political support we must quickly correct some of the absurd things from this first package of measures," Social Democrat leader Sorin Grindeanu said. The Social Democrats had supported replacing a flat rate of tax on income with progressive taxation instead of raising VAT, but the other parties did not support that and the tax authority has said it is not equipped to enforce it. Bolojan said earlier this month the coalition government would do everything possible to lower the deficit to around 8% of economic output by year-end from last year's 9.3% - above an initial 7% target - and closer to 6% in 2026. Under Romanian law, the tax measures could be challenged in the constitutional court, and the opposition last week said they would seek to do so. (Reporting by Luiza Ilie; editing by Barbara Lewis)

Romanian government survives no confidence vote and pushes tax hikes through
Romanian government survives no confidence vote and pushes tax hikes through

Straits Times

time14-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Straits Times

Romanian government survives no confidence vote and pushes tax hikes through

BUCHAREST - Romanian Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan's three-week old coalition government survived a no confidence vote on Monday, allowing it to push through unpopular tax hikes needed to lower the European Union's largest budget deficit. The government has fast-tracked through parliament an increase in value-added tax, excise duties and other levies from August to prevent a ratings downgrade to below investment level and to unblock access to EU funds. The broad coalition of four pro-European parties took power at the end of June, ending months of political deadlock after a presidential election was cancelled in December and was re-run in May. The parties have been reluctant to agree the hikes that have been criticised by employers and unionists while thousands of public sector workers have staged protests. The hard-right opposition filed Monday's no confidence motion and said it will file more. "I understand the opposition does not agree with the measures proposed by the government," Bolojan told lawmakers. "What then are the solutions? On the one hand we are told the problems in the economy are serious, on the other not to take these measures. We can't have both." Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore HSA intensifies crackdown on vapes; young suspected Kpod peddlers nabbed in Bishan, Yishun Singapore Man charged over distributing nearly 3 tonnes of vapes in one day in Bishan, Ubi Avenue 3 Singapore Public healthcare institutions to record all Kpod cases, confiscate vapes: MOH, HSA Singapore Man allegedly attacks woman with knife at Kallang Wave Mall, to be charged with attempted murder Singapore Singapore boosts support for Timor-Leste as it prepares to join Asean Singapore UN aviation and maritime agencies pledge to collaborate to boost safety, tackle challenges Singapore High Court dismisses appeal of drink driver who killed one after treating Tampines road like racetrack Singapore 18 years' jail for woman who hacked adoptive father to death after tussle over Sengkang flat While all four parties in the government approved the increases, the Social Democrats, the coalition's largest party without which a ruling majority cannot hold, criticised them on Monday. "For solid, continued political support we must quickly correct some of the absurd things from this first package of measures," Social Democrat leader Sorin Grindeanu said. The Social Democrats had supported replacing a flat rate of tax on income with progressive taxation instead of raising VAT, but the other parties did not support that and the tax authority has said it is not equipped to enforce it. Bolojan said earlier this month the coalition government would do everything possible to lower the deficit to around 8% of economic output by year-end from last year's 9.3% - above an initial 7% target - and closer to 6% in 2026. Under Romanian law, the tax measures could be challenged in the constitutional court, and the opposition last week said they would seek to do so. REUTERS

New Romanian premier Bolojan links austerity plans to vote of confidence
New Romanian premier Bolojan links austerity plans to vote of confidence

Qatar Tribune

time07-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Qatar Tribune

New Romanian premier Bolojan links austerity plans to vote of confidence

Bucharest: New Romanian Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan has tied a vote of confidence in parliament to a stringent austerity programme just two weeks after taking office. If no faction submits a motion of no confidence within three days, Bolojan's programme will be considered adopted without further voting. Should a motion of no confidence be submitted and accepted by a parliamentary majority, the conservative prime minister will be deemed ousted and his programme rejected. The far-right Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) faction has hinted at submitting a motion of no confidence but would need votes from potential defectors within the ruling camp to secure a majority. (DPA)

Romanian government to face no-confidence vote over deficit-lowering tax hikes
Romanian government to face no-confidence vote over deficit-lowering tax hikes

Straits Times

time07-07-2025

  • Business
  • Straits Times

Romanian government to face no-confidence vote over deficit-lowering tax hikes

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox BUCHAREST - Romania's two-week-old broad coalition government is set to face a no-confidence vote as it seeks to speed through planned tax hikes that have triggered street protests even though they are needed to avert a ratings downgrade to below investment grade. Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan sought on Monday to fast-track parliamentary approval of the hikes from August in a procedure that exposes the government to a no-confidence vote. As part of the process, the opposition hard-right Alliance for Uniting Romanians, or AUR, Romania's second-largest party, has three days to file a no-confidence motion, which it has already said it will seek. The motion would only pass if lawmakers from the four pro-European parties that form the government and have so far supported the tax hikes side with the opposition. "My appeal to colleagues in the opposition is this: take part in improving decisions, not in blocking them," Bolojan told lawmakers. "The appeal to all Romanians is ... that we are aware these measures will be felt in the day-to-day life of a very large number of citizens. We are working to shorten as much as possible the difficult period Romania will face." Romania ran four election campaigns last year, including a divisive presidential ballot that was cancelled and re-run this May. It had the highest budget deficit - 9.3% of economic output - in the European Union. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Eligible S'poreans to get up to $850 in GSTV cash, up to $450 in MediSave top-ups in August Singapore Four golf courses to close by 2035, leaving Singapore with 12 courses Singapore Singapore's second mufti Sheikh Syed Isa Semait dies at age 87 Singapore Fewer marriages in Singapore in 2024; greater marital stability for recent unions Singapore Competition watchdog gives SIA, M'sia Airlines conditional approval to continue cooperation Singapore About 20 delivery riders meet Pritam Singh to discuss platform worker issues Business OCBC sets loan target of $5b and covers more territories in boost for serial entrepreneurs Singapore Reform Party to leave opposition group People's Alliance for Reform; two parties remain The tax hikes, which were made public last week, have been criticised by employers and unionists alike and thousands of public sector workers have staged protests. The government will raise value added tax, excise duties and increase taxes including on dividends and banks' turnover. The impact is expected to be 9.5 billion lei ($2.21 billion) in 2025 and 35 billion lei ($8.14 billion) in 2026. An opinion survey released on Monday by pollster INSCOP Research showed the AUR would win 40% of votes in an election, whereas the ruling Social Democrats, currently the largest party in parliament, would get 13.7%. REUTERS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store