Party Leader reported tensions with Prime Minister in Periyar [6 sources]
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The Romanian Social Democratic Party (PSD) and far-right Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) have filed a no-confidence motion against the Ilie Bolojan government with 251 parliamentary signatures, exceeding the 233 votes needed for passage. The motion is scheduled for vote on May 5, 2026, and AUR leader George Simion indicated high confidence it will pass, citing voter demand for change and criticizing the government's taxation policies related to deficit reduction. The PM warned that political turmoil threatens investor confidence and Romania's ability to absorb EU funds.
Romania's political crisis is deepening as the Social Democratic Party (PSD) and nationalist party AUR prepare a joint no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan's Liberal-led government following PSD's exit from the coalition. The motion is expected to be debated in May 2026, with AUR leader George Simion stating a vote could occur as early as May 5. According to parliamentary arithmetic, PSD and AUR together hold approximately 219 votes but need 233 signatures to pass the motion, requiring additional support from other parties.
As the UK's Labour Party enters a potentially existential leadership crisis, Catherine Viette is pleased to welcome Matthew Torbitt, political commentator and former Labour Party advisor. Torbitt argues that Starmer can probably survive in the short term because Labour’s internal rules make leadership coups difficult. Unlike the Conservatives, Labour “don’t tend to dispose of leaders, particularly in government,” and any challenge would require “81 MPs backing a single candidate.” That means dissatisfaction alone is not enough.
The intelligence item references four political figures including a radical-right leader (Grzegorz Braun), two members of Poland's national-conservative PiS party, and a politician from the far-right Confederation party. The specific context and nature of their coordination is not provided in the excerpt.