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Suspended Romanian President Traian Basescu holds a torch while speaking at the end of the referendum on Romania's president impeachment day Octav Ganea/AP/Press Association Images

Romania: Impeachment of president fails

The referendum to impeach the president failed because of low voter turnout.

ROMANIAN ELECTION OFFICIALS declared yesterday that a referendum to impeach the nation’s president on grounds that he overstepped his authority had failed because of low voter turnout.

The Central Election Bureau put the voter turnout in Sunday’s referendum on President Traian Basescu at 45.92 percent, with a 3 percent margin of error.

By law, such referendums are invalid if less than half the electorate cast ballots. The bureau did not immediately give the outcome of the vote, but two exit polls showed more than 80 percent favored impeaching Basescu.

Basescu said on national TV as he announced he had survived the vote:

Romanians have invalidated the referendum by not voting.

However, he acknowledged he had lost popular support, and pledged to work toward reconciliation in the nation of 19 million which threw off communism in 1989.

I assure Romanians that once I return … I will try and generate a sentiment of reconciliation in society. It’s clear that Romanians are unhappy about what has happened in recent years. Divisions in society must be stopped, they must be annihilated, because Romania needs all its energy to … integrate into the civilized world.

Doubts

The political turmoil has dented Romania’s credibility, with the US and European Union expressing doubts about the left-leaning government ‘s respect for the independence of the judiciary.

Critics accuse the government leader, Prime Minister Victor Ponta, of orchestrating the effort to oust Basescu. Ponta claimed the president was behind an effort to make public a scandal involving allegations that Ponta had plagiarised his 2004 doctoral thesis.

Basescu was accused by his rivals in the government of violating the constitution by overstepping his authority to interfere in the daily running of the country, appointing loyalists to key positions in the justice system and using the secret services against his political rivals.

Basescu claimed his rivals were planning to seize control of the judicial system and European Union funds. Romania joined the EU in 2007.

A former ship captain, Basescu called the impeachment process a political vendetta carried out by his opponents and urged supporters to boycott the vote — a tactic that apparently helped him survive.

Basescu, who has been president since 2004, saw his approval numbers drop after the government introduced austerity measures in 2010 to meet demands by the International Monetary Fund in exchange for a multibillion euro loan.

Read: Romanians vote on whether to impeach president>

Read: Former Romanian Prime Minister shoots and wounds himself>

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