The Senate Senatul |
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6th Legislature | |
Type | |
Type | Upper house |
Leadership | |
President | Vasile Blaga, Democratic Liberal Party since 28 November 2011 |
Vicepresidents | Ioan Chelaru (PSD) Alexandru Pereş (PDL) Dan Voiculescu (PNL-PC) Cristian Diaconescu (UNPR)[1] since February 2011 |
Secretaries | David Gheorghe (PD-L) Onofrei Orest (PD-L) Popa Cornel (PNL) Silistru Doina (PSD+PC) since December 2008 |
Quaestors | Ioan Chelaru (PSD+PC) Constantin Dumitru (PD-L) Dan-Radu Ruşanu (PNL) Attila Verestóy (UDMR) since December 2008 |
Structure | |
Members | 137 |
Political groups | PD-L (51) PSD + PC (48 + 1) PNL (28) UDMR (9) |
Committees |
15
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Elections | |
Voting system | 1992 – 2008: Closed list, D'Hondt method since 2008: nominal vote, Mixed member proportional representation |
Last election | 30 November 2008 |
Meeting place | |
Palace of the Parliament, Bucharest | |
Website | |
www.senat.ro |
The Senate of Romania (Romanian: Senat) is the upper house in the bicameral Parliament of Romania. It has 137 seats (as of 28 November 2004), to which members are elected by direct popular vote, using Mixed member proportional representation in 42 electoral districts (the 41 counties plus the city of Bucharest), to serve four-year terms.
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After the Romanian Revolution of 1989, the Senate was housed in the "Palace of the Senate" (Romanian: Palatul Senatului), located in Revolution Square. That U-shaped structure was built from 1938 to 1941 under engineer Emil Prager's coordination, following the plans of architect Emil Nădejde. It housed the Council of Ministers and from 1958 to 1989 it was the headquarters of the Central Committee of the Romanian Communist Party. During the Revolution, Romanian President Nicolae Ceauşescu and his wife Elena fled by helicopter from the roof of the building. In 2005 Senators moved into the Palace of the Parliament, joining their colleagues from the Chamber of Deputies. "Palatul Senatului" now houses offices of the Ministry of Administration and Interior.
In December 2008, the Democratic Liberal Party and the Alliance of the Social Democratic Party and Conservative Party formed a coalition government (highlighted in bold in the table below).
Party | Election seating | Lost | Won | Present seating | |||
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Seats | % | Seats | % | ||||
Democratic Liberal Party | 51 | 37.22% | 6 | 2 | 47 | 37.96% | |
Social Democratic Party | 49 | 35.77% | 9 | 3 | 43 | 31.39% | |
National Liberal Party | 28 | 20.44% | 9 | 4 | 25 | 16.79% | |
Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania | 9 | 6.57% | 0 | 0 | 9 | 6.57% | |
Independents | — | — | 1 | 12 | 12 | 7.3%; | |
Vacant seats | 1 | — | |||||
Total | 137 | 100 | — | 137 | 100 |
In the Romanian legislative election, 2004, held on 28 November 2004, the Justice and Truth Alliance won the greatest number of seats, even though no party won an outright majority. The President of the Senate for this legislature was Nicolae Văcăroiu, who was elected on 20 December 2004. Following his ad interim presidency of Romania, he delegated his attributions to the vicepresident Doru Ioan Tărăcilă. After Văcăroiu was sworn in as president of the Court of Accounts, Ilie Sârbu was elected as the new President of the Senate.
Until April 2007, the Justice and Truth Alliance governed in coalition with other minor parties. In April 2007, after the break-up of the Justice and Truth Alliance, the National Liberal Party and the Democratic Union of Hungarians formed a minority government coalition (highlighted in bold in the table below).
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Party | % of seats | Seats | |
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Social Democratic Party | 31.4 | 43 | |
National Liberal Party | 16 | 22 | |
Democratic Party | 15.4 | 21 | |
Greater Romania Party | 13.1 | 18 | |
Conservative Party | 8.0 | 11 | |
Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania | 7.3 | 10 | |
Independents | 8.8 | 12 | |
Total | 100 | 137 |
Elections to the Senate were held on 26 November 2000, in which the Social Democratic Party of Romania (PSD) won an overall majority. Then President of the Senate of Romania was Nicolae Văcăroiu, who was elected in December, 2000. The allocation of seats was as follows:
Party ' % of seats' seats PSD 46.43 65 PRM 26.43 37 PNL 9.29 13 PD 9.29 13 UDMR 8.57 12 Others 0.00 0
The Standing Bureau of the Senate consists of the President of the Senate, four vice-presidents, four secretaries, and four quaestors. The President of the Standing Bureau also serves as the President of the Senate. The President is elected, by secret ballot, for the duration of the legislative period.[2]
Period | Name | Party |
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1990–1992 | Alexandru Bârlădeanu | FSN |
1992–1996 | Oliviu Gherman | FDSN |
1996 – February 2000 | Petre Roman | PD |
February 2000 | Mircea Ionescu-Quintus | PNL |
2000–2004 | Nicolae Văcăroiu | PDSR/PSD |
2004–14 October 2008 | Nicolae Văcăroiu | PSD |
14 October 2008 – 28 October 2008 | Doru Ioan Tǎrǎcilǎ (acting) | PSD |
28 October 2008 – 19 December 2008 | Ilie Sârbu | PSD |
19 December 2008 – 23 November 2011 | Mircea Geoană | PSD |
23 November 2011 - 28 November 2011 | Petru Filip (acting) | PDL |
28 November 2011- | Vasile Blaga | PDL |
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