​Marcel Cholaku is right about Klaus Iohannis in one thing: the president is the one who appoints the prime minister. From that moment, the leader of the PSD enters the electoral logic and claims that the stability of the government, which the president also refers to, is provided by the PSD, without which “Romania would be thrown into right-wing chaos.”

Marcel CholakuPhoto: AGERPRES

“The appointment of the prime minister, according to the Constitution, belongs exclusively to the president. That’s what I always said. However, this decision depends on whether the stability provided by the ruling act PSD will be maintained and we will achieve our social and economic goals, or whether Romania will return to right-wing chaos.

Romanians and Romanian companies are waiting for solutions to overcome the crisis more easily! Romanians don’t think they’ll forgive someone walking around the government with matches and a bottle of gasoline. We can’t be firefighters forever! It is time to focus only on building public policies to improve the standard of living of Romanians!” wrote Čolaku on Facebook.

The PSD leader blames the PNL and the fact that OMV does not pay the solidarity tax.

“Regarding discussions in the public space about certain companies that do not pay the solidarity tax, the answer of the European Commission is as clear as possible: the Regulation has been transposed correctly and without any changes! The participant in the negotiations from the Romanian side was the Minister of Energy, who during the discussion of the Regulation did not require any point of view from the Ministry of Finance. the opinion of this institution regarding GEO, which implements the solidarity tax!”, said Cholaku.

​President Klaus Iohannis on Thursday did not give a concrete answer to the question of whether he would appoint PSD leader Marcel Čolaka as prime minister, saying that if the coalition leaders decide to change the government, he will decide that time is the best decision.

He argues that in the current environment it is important for the government to be stable.

“The country must be governed, and the country must have a stable government in these troubled times, and then we must have the inner strength to go more or less lightly through certain petty statements and see what Romania’s interests really are. When the coalition decides to change the government, all the interested parties will present their point of view to me, and according to the Constitution, I will take the decision that I think will be the best for Romania. “, – said Yohannis.