June 19, 2026 UPDATE
A roundup of local and international news.
Newsroom, 19.06.2026, 20:00
Politics. Sunday is the new deadline set by Romania’s Prime Minister-designate, Adrian Veştea, to submit the ruling programme and the list of ministers to Parliament. In an Internet post, he spoke about his intention to use this time to build a solid agreement to support the economy and budgetary balance. On Friday, the National Liberal Party’s Extraordinary National Council decided to hold the party’s Extraordinary Congress on Sunday, in Bucharest and made some changes to the party’s statute, so that the party will have only one first deputy-president, instead of four, and eight deputy-presidents, while the party’s Executive Bureau will be dissolved. In another development, the Social Democratic Party has also postponed for Sunday making a decision on whether to support a possible Veştea cabinet, depending on the measures envisaged by the Prime Minister-designate.
Summit. Romania’s objective is for the future multiannual budget of the European Union to be as large as possible, which would mean that the net contribution of each country will be greater, said Romanian president Nicuşor Dan on Friday in Brussels, at the end of the summer European Council. He noted that in this EU budget there are national plans in which there is much greater flexibility for countries to define their own national programs on agriculture and cohesion. The European Commission has proposed a multiannual budget of approximately 2,000 billion euros for the period 2028-2034, which includes a broad reform of the Union’s main financing instruments. The proposal provides for a reduction of approximately 10% of the funds intended for the Common Agricultural Policy and Cohesion Policy, a measure contested by a group of 17 member states, including Romania. A week ago, the Cypriot presidency of the EU Council proposed a compromise alternative, largely maintaining the cuts for agriculture and cohesion, but introducing limited increases for some beneficiary states and reducing the overall size of the budget proposed by the European Commission by approximately 2%.
Moldova exports. Romania remains the main export destination for the ex-Soviet, Romanian-speaking Republic of Moldova, with over 30% of its exports going to the Romanian market. Trade exchanges between the two countries last year reached roughly 4 billion Euros, 15% more than in 2024, and in the first four months of 2026, Moldovan exports to Romania rose by 10%. At present, 40% of Moldova’s exports to Romania consist of food products, including sun-flower seeds, rape-seeds and wine, followed by bakery, oils, canned food, juices and jams. Non-food exports have totaled roughly 600 million euros and consist of iron bars, furniture and electric cables. The data has been presented during the first edition this year of the Export Vision programme staged by Agency of Investment in the Moldovan capital Chişinău.
Goat plague. The European Commission has banned Romania’s exports of sheep and goat meat to other EU countries by the end of the year, said Romania’s interim Agriculture Minister, Tanczos Barna. The Commission made the decision after cases of goat plague, also known as PPR, were reported in Mureş county, central Romania, believing there is a major risk the disease might spread. The minister says the measure is very disproportionate and will have a major economic impact on the sheep-breeding sector in Romania. Barna says that other countries in similar situations aren’t facing such severe measures. He pointed out that Romania has become the biggest sheep exporter in the EU, with record exports to markets outside the bloc. (CM)