The president of Romania serves as the head of state of Romania. The office was created by the communist leader Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1974 and has developed into its modern form after the Romanian Revolution and the adoption of the 1991 constitution. The current president of Romania is Klaus Iohannis, who has been serving since 21 December 2014.
List
edit- Key regarding the political parties of affiliation
Romanian Communist Party (PCR)
National Salvation Front (FSN)
Social Democratic Party (PSD)
Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party (PNȚCD)
Democratic Liberal Party (PDL)
National Liberal Party (PNL)
Socialist Republic of Romania (1965–1989)
editNo. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Elected | Term of office | Political Party | Ref. | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Time in office | ||||||
1 | Nicolae Ceaușescu (1918–1989) |
1974 | 28 March 1974 | 22 December 1989 | 15 years,
249 days |
Romanian Communist Party (PCR) | [1] | |
Despite his country's membership in the Warsaw Pact, Ceaușescu recognised the state of Israel, supported Romanian nationalism, and denounced the 1968 Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia. With his 1971 July Theses speech, Ceaușescu launched a quasi-Maoist and Neo-Stalinist cultural reform. He and his wife, Elena Ceaușescu were deposed during the 1989 Romanian Revolution and were both executed three days later. |
Romania (1989–present)
editNo. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Elected | Term of office | Political Party | Ref. | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Time in office | ||||||
— | Ion Iliescu (born 1930) |
1990 | 26 December 1989 | 20 June 1990 | 176 days | National Salvation Front (FSN) | [2] | |
A former Romanian Communist Party (PCR) high-ranking member and subsequent relative dissident, Iliescu was one of the main founders of the National Salvation Front (FSN) during the 1989 Revolution. As a member of the FSN triumvirate, Iliescu served as the acting head of state of Romania for almost six months during the beginning of its slow transition to free market capitalism. | ||||||||
2 | 1990 1992 |
20 June 1990 | 29 November 1996 | 6 years,
161 days |
National Salvation Front (FSN) | [2] | ||
The first Romanian president to have been freely and democratically elected, Ion Iliescu was an independent social democrat in geopolitical regards. He subsequently earned a negative reputation after his handling of the Mineriad's miner interventions in Bucharest. Under his first term, the current Constitution of Romania was introduced. | ||||||||
3 | Emil Constantinescu (born 1939) |
1996 | 29 November 1996 | 20 December 2000 | 4 years,
21 days |
Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party (PNȚCD)1 | [3] | |
Constantinescu was the successful candidate of the right-leaning Romanian Democratic Convention (CDR) which won the 1996 general elections, consequently paving the way for the first peaceful transfer of power in post-1989 Romania. During his term as president, Constantinescu struggled with the slow implementation of the modernization and privatization process which was bogged down by excessive bureaucracy.
Nonetheless, the CDR coalition managed to secure three prime ministers who initiated liberalizing economic reforms under Constantinescu's presidency, although the overall progress was meagre. | ||||||||
(2) | Ion Iliescu (born 1930) |
2000 | 20 December 2000 | 20 December 2004 | 4 years | Social Democratic Party (PSD) | [2] | |
Iliescu was elected to his third non-consecutive term in 2000. In March 2004, at the end of his last term, Romania joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), as part of the second largest wave of expansion in Central and Eastern Europe. | ||||||||
4 | Traian Băsescu (born 1951) |
2004 2009 |
20 December 2004 | 21 December 2014 | 10 years,
1 day[a] |
Democratic Liberal Party (PDL)2 | [4] | |
Elected with the support of the right-leaning Justice and Truth Alliance (DA), Băsescu won the presidency in 2004 on a platform targeting widespread political corruption. During his first term, Romania joined in the European Union (EU). In spite of the harsh opposition of the left-leaning parties (especially the PSD and the PRM), he publicly condemned the former communist regime.
His second term was marked by a landslide victory of the opposition coalition, specifically the Social Liberal Union (USL), in both the local and the legislative elections of 2012, amidst heavy losses for the presidential party (i.e. the Democratic Liberal Party). Internationally, Băsescu aligned Romania closer to the United States, the European Union (EU), and NATO, maintaining a pro-Western foreign policy throughout both his terms. He was suspended twice, namely in 2007 and 2012. Both impeachment referendums were invalidated by the Constitutional Court on the grounds of low turnout, thus paving his way for a comeback to presidency. | ||||||||
5 | Klaus Iohannis (born 1959) |
2014 2019 |
21 December 2014 | Incumbent | 9 years, 335 days | National Liberal Party (PNL) | [5] | |
Elected with the support of the right-leaning Christian Liberal Alliance (ACL), Johannis won against former USL ally and coalition partner Victor Ponta in the run-off of the 2014 Romanian presidential elections. During the presidential campaign, his platform focused on anti-corruption, judicial independence, and fiscal relaxation.[6] He is also the first Romanian President to have stemmed from an ethnic minority, as he is of German (more specifically Transylvanian Saxon) origin.[7]
In the wake of the 2016 legislative elections, his first presidential term was marked by the frequent change of prime ministers made by his former and current close allies, the socialists, as well as by the most massive and widespread series of protests to have ever occurred in the history of Romania (which were directed against the political corruption supposedly endorsed by the socialist governments). After defeating PSD candidate Viorica Dăncilă by a landslide in both presidential election rounds during late 2019, his second term has been marked by the COVID-19 pandemic and by further political instability (resulting in the 2021 Romanian political crisis). In 2023, under his second last year of presidency, Johannis faced a general strike of the Romanian teachers. |
Notes:
1 Emil Constantinescu was the candidate of the Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party (PNȚCD) whose candidacy was supported as part of the larger right-leaning Romanian Democratic Convention (CDR) in both 1992 and 1996;
2 Traian Băsescu was the presidential candidate of the Democratic Party (PD) whose candidacy was supported as part of the larger right-leaning Justice and Truth Alliance (DA) in 2004, alongside the National Liberal Party. In 2009, his re-election was supported only by the Democratic Liberal Party (PDL) along with a certain faction of the Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party (PNȚCD).
Acting presidents (2007; 2012)
editNº | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Political Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Time in office | ||||
— | Nicolae Văcăroiu (born 1943) |
20 April 2007 | 23 May 2007 | 33 days | Social Democratic Party (PSD) | |
Văcăroiu, the president of the Senate, served as interim president following Băsescu's first impeachment. | ||||||
— | Crin Antonescu (born 1959) |
10 July 2012 | 27 August 2012 | 48 days | National Liberal Party (PNL) | |
Antonescu, the president of the Senate, served as interim president following Băsescu's second impeachment. |
List of presidents by religious affiliation
editNo. | Name | Religion | Branch | Further branch | Denomination | Years in office |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nicolae Ceaușescu | Atheist | 1974–1989 | |||
2 | Ion Iliescu | Atheist | 1989–1996 | |||
3 | Emil Constantinescu | Christian | Eastern Orthodox | Orthodox Church | Romanian Orthodox | 1996–2000 |
4 | Ion Iliescu | Atheist | 2000–2004 | |||
5 | Traian Băsescu | Christian | Eastern Orthodox | Orthodox Church | Romanian Orthodox | 2004–2014 |
6 | Klaus Iohannis | Christian | Protestant | Lutheran | Evangelical Church A.C. | 2014–present |
Timeline
editSee also
editNotes
editReferences
edit- ^ Grosescu, R. (2004). The Political Regrouping of Romanian Nomenklatura during the 1989 Revolution. Romanian Journal of Society and Politics, 4(1), 97-123.
- ^ a b c "Ion Iliescu". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
- ^ "Emil Constantinescu". EastWest Institute. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
- ^ Eugen Tomiuc (13 December 2004). "Romania: Basescu Wins Presidential Vote, Vows To Fight Corruption". Radio Free Europe. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
- ^ "Klaus Iohannis wins Romanian presidential election". The Guardian. November 16, 2014. Archived from the original on November 17, 2014. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
- ^ "Presidents of Romania since 1989". World Atlas. Retrieved 1 July 2018.
- ^ "Romanians elect first ethnic German president". EU Observer. 17 November 2014. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
- Bulei, Ion, O istorie a românilor, Editura Meronia, București, 2007, pg. 266-267