Bucharest Stays on Course
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The fall of Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan’s government carries significant implications for Romania’s democratic and political stability. On May 5, Romania’s Parliament brought it down through a no-confidence motion that drew 281 votes, the largest margin for such a motion in Romanian parliamentary history. The Social Democrats and the far-right Alliance for the Union of Romanians initiated the vote, which ends a four-party pro-European cabinet sworn in barely ten months ago. The leu, Romania's national currency has hit record lows and markets are jittery. Yet for Bucharest's transatlantic partners, the strategic picture is more stable than the headlines suggest.
The fall of the Bolojan cabinet does not alter Romania's foreign policy or security trajectory. Initiators framed the motion as a rejection of austerity and asset sales, while the outgoing cabinet described it as a form of resistance to reform. Whatever the merits, the central dispute was over domestic economic policy, not Romania's Western orientation, which the parliamentary majority broadly supports. President Nicușor Dan has recommitted Romania to its Western course, to the EU's SAFE defense instrument, and to the National Recovery and Resilience Plan—objectives on which pro-European parties agree regardless of the vote's outcome. His participation in the 8th European Political Community summit in Yerevan on May 4, co-chairing the Democratic Resilience and Hybrid Threats roundtable and hosting talks on the Vertical Gas Corridor, showed that Bucharest is still helping to shape the European security agenda and is not paralyzed by domestic turbulence.
Romania's commitments to the Republic of Moldova are similarly unaffected. In Yerevan, Dan took part in the latest meeting of the Core Group for Moldova, a coordination format launched in 2024 at the joint initiative of Romania and France to bolster Chișinău's security and resilience. He signaled optimism that Moldova could officially open its first EU accession cluster by the end of June. Bucharest also remains the indispensable anchor of the Vertical Gas Corridor and a steady advocate for sustained support to Ukraine.
The Bolojan government leaves a record of meaningful deficit reduction. In ten months, the headline figure was reduced from 9.3% of GDP in 2024, the highest in the EU, to 7.9% in 2025. This was the bloc's largest single-year correction, helping Romania to narrowly avoid a sovereign-rating downgrade. Sustaining this trajectory is essential to unlocking roughly €10 billion in EU recovery funds before the August cutoff.
A pro-European majority remains the only viable governing formula for Romania. Dan has ruled out any coalition involving the far-right Alliance for the Union of Romanians, leaving one realistic path: a reconstituted four-party arrangement under a new prime minister, not a strategic reorientation. For Washington and Brussels, the message from Bucharest is clear: There is turbulence at the top, but the compass holds.
The views expressed herein are those solely of the author(s). GMF as an institution does not take positions.