BFF-43 Romania court upholds jail sentence for ruling party chief

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BFF-43

ROMANIA-POLITICS-CORRUPTION-APPEAL

Romania court upholds jail sentence for ruling party chief

BUCHAREST, May 27, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A Romanian court on Monday upheld a
jail sentence for the powerful head of Romania’s ruling Social Democrats,
Liviu Dragnea, meaning he now has 24 hours to report to police to begin his
sentence.

The verdict will almost certainly remove from public life a man who is
widely seen as the puppet master behind the government and a key figure in
the PSD’s push for controversial judicial reforms.

Dragnea was unsuccessful in his bid to overturn a conviction he received
last year for using his influence to procure fake public jobs for two women,
who were actually working for the Social Democrats (PSD) at the time.

The High Court of Cassation and Justice on Monday confirmed his original
three-and-a-half-year jail sentence.

Despite the PSD’s election victory in 2016, Dragnea’s deep-seated ambition
to become prime minister was thwarted because of a previous suspended jail
sentence for electoral fraud.

The verdict also comes on the heels of a stinging defeat for the PSD in
Sunday’s European parliament elections.

– ‘Storm of hatred’ –

A grim-faced Dragnea appeared in front of the cameras on Sunday night to
say the PSD had faced a “storm of hatred” in the election results, with the
party falling 12 points from its score in 2014 to 25.8 percent.

Centre-right and liberal opponents, by contrast, racked up almost 50
percent between them.

Young people and city-dwellers turned out in force to express their
frustration with the government, with turnout nudging 50 percent.

Asked about Monday’s court appearance, Dragnea was his normal defiant
self, alluding to dark conspiracies ranged against him and “unimaginable
pressure” being exerted on judges to find him guilty.

He also surprised many by saying that he would not challenge incumbent
President Klaus Iohannis in elections expected this autumn.

Over the past three years, Dragnea and the PSD — the successor party to
the communists — had courted voters in poorer and more rural areas of the
country with generous promises.

Despite not becoming prime minister, the moustachioed leader wielded
considerable influence behind the scenes and toppled two prime ministers in
just seven months before nominating Viorica Dancila to the post in January
2018.

Analysts say his focus on curtailing the activities of the country’s anti-
corruption agency has lost the PSD many voters.

His argument was that he wants to put an end to abuses of power by
prosecutors “suffered by millions of Romanians”.

But the row has also overshadowed Romania’s first ever rotating presidency
of the EU, with Brussels threatening sanctions may be on the way if the
government does not change course.

Dragnea had begun to mimic attacks on the EU of the kind made by Hungarian
Prime Minister Viktor Orban, accusing Brussels of “interfering” in Romania’s
affairs and its sovereignty.

A second headache for the PSD is likely to come in the results from a
referendum also held on Sunday on the government’s controversial judicial
reforms.

Turnout for the vote, called by Iohannis, was well in excess of the 30-
percent threshold needed to make the referendum valid and analysts expect
voters to have rejected the PSD’s plans.

BSS/AFP/RY/1815 hrs