Romanian Opp Party Files Criminal Complaint Against House Speaker Over Allegedly Marred Vote
People close to the matter told MEDIAFAX social democrats accuse Anastase of abuse of office and forgery and Voinescu of fraud, because he was the meeting secretary when the bill was put to the vote.
Romania’s Chamber of Deputies last week enacted the bill with 170 votes in favor, two against and three abstentions, after ten hours of debates and in the absence of lawmakers from opposition parties (Social Democratic, Liberal and Conservative), who had walked out.
Social democrat leader Victor Ponta said video footage of the meeting shows there were no more than 80 lawmakers in the room and the required quorum to pass the bill was not met.
Romania needs to adopt a unitary pension law to receive a new installment of about EUR900 million from the International Monetary Fund. The IMF said the law must be enacted by end-September. The pension bill was passed tacitly by the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies has to enact it before it is sent to the head of state for promulgation.
The Chamber meets Tuesday in plenary to decide whether the pension bill will be put to the vote again.