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Losers take all

May 24th 2007 | BUCHAREST 
>From The Economist print edition

A president triumphs at the polls-but is humbled by his loose tongue


FOR those hoping for political calm in Romania and Bulgaria, the European
Union's newest members, last weekend was a reasonably good one. The Romanian
president, Traian Basescu, won 74% in a referendum on his impeachment on May
19th, wrongfooting the minority Liberal-led government that suspended him.
The prime minister, Calin Popescu Tariceanu, now concedes that the vote was
a "waste of energy and money".

What happens next depends largely on the Socialists, heirs of Romania's
Communist Party. With 150 deputies, they are the largest party in
parliament. The ruling coalition of Liberals and the Hungarian minority
musters only 109. The best outcome would be an early election, perhaps to
coincide with a European one this autumn. This is backed by Mr Basescu's
Democrats, flushed with their referendum victory. One deal has the
Socialists backing an early poll and dumping their more egregiously corrupt
members in return for a big role in a post-election government.

Failing that, the Socialists might team up with the battered Liberals, in
return for Mr Tariceanu's job. In theory, the Liberals could also continue
with their minority government until the scheduled election in autumn 2008.
But their plunging popularity suggests this would be unwise. On current
form, they could even miss the 5% threshold for parliamentary seats.

Amid his enemies' confusion, Mr Basescu should be preparing for a glorious
return to the Cotroceni Palace. But his triumph was marred by scandal. On
the day of the referendum, Mr Basescu was hassled in a supermarket by
Andreea Pana, a journalist who tried to film an interview on her mobile
phone. Mr Basescu lost his temper, insulted her and grabbed the phone,
telling her she could have it back on Monday. Unaware that it was still
recording, he complained to his wife in the car about the "aggressive,
stinking gypsy".

Ms Pana, as it happens, is not Roma (gypsy) by ethnicity. But the incident
reveals Mr Basescu's common touch (sometimes a strength) and his
short-tempered manner (definitely a weakness). Many liberal-minded
Romanians, including those who support his policies, condemned him; he has
apologised. The scandal will dent his image among foreign admirers.

What would impress them would be a statesmanlike push in the battle against
corruption. The EU is to issue a progress report on Romania and Bulgaria on
June 27th. Both countries are struggling to root out corruption. In Romania
the problem is distraction; in Bulgaria it reaches the heart of government.
The prosecutor-general, Boris Velchev, promises early indictments in a case
involving a top government man.

Bulgarian voters would like that. They shunned the coalition in a European
election on May 20th. The winner was a party led by a populist conservative
mayor of Sofia, Boiko Borisov, running on an anti-corruption ticket. But, as
Mr Basescu's fortunes show, getting elected on a clean-government platform
is one thing; making a lasting difference is much harder.

Copyright C 2007 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group
 
----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)

"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)

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