​In the first speech after being elected USR president, Cătălin Drula said that the party no longer has time for “celebrities” and “immature politics” in a context in which the last months of the formation were marked by a dispute with the people of Dacian Ciolos.

USR pre-election rallyPhoto: AGERPRES

Is democracy ending in the USSR? “No, anarchy is over,” Katalin Drula says on HotNews LIVE.

When asked if there was still anarchy in the USSR, the party leader denied it. “No, actually the answer is essentially no, but the anarchic particles, shall we say, set the tone at a certain point. If there are 20 people in a room talking quietly, politely and respectfully to each other, and one person walks in and starts yelling and acting anti-socially, someone new to the room says it’s chaos. (…) Is it enough for one to destroy or destroy, and for many to build? This is how it generally works in any part of life. But my role as a leader is to prevent the destruction of the jobs of tens of thousands of people working on this project,” he said.

Drula commented that “it’s been a few years, now we’re entering the maturity zone, and we’re at that level of a mature party. We are no longer at the level of “how is the UDR, boys and girls?”.