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Romanian President Nominates New Candidate for Prime Minister

WARSAW, June 14 (Reuters) – Romania’s centrist ⁠President ⁠Nicusor Dan on ⁠Sunday designated Adrian Vestea, a member of ​the liberal party, as prime minister, after independent candidate Eugen ‌Tomac withdrew.

Vestea, 52, is ‌the county council president of the central ⁠Romanian county ⁠of Brasov. Eugen Tomac had been seeking to ​lead a government of technocrats, but lacked support from the parties in parliament.

“Eugen Tomac withdrew his mandate this ​morning and as such I nominate Adrian Vestea as ⁠prime minister,” ⁠centrist President Nicusor ⁠Dan ​said on Sunday. “At the moment it is clear that a ​political (government) solution ⁠is the right one.”

Parliamentary parties have previously said that a minority political government, without a permanent majority in parliament, would be better than a government ⁠of technocrats.

Dan is seeking to end a political crisis that ⁠has stalled policymaking, endangered access to EU funds and driven the leu currency to record lows. Vestea will have 10 days to form a government and win a parliamentary vote of confidence.

Romania’s next parliamentary election is not due until 2028. It has never held an ⁠early election and analysts say the likelihood of one now is small as the opposition far right leads opinion surveys, significantly ahead of pro-European ​parties.

(Reporting by Luiza Ilie, writing by Marek ​Strzelecki;Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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