June 16, 2026 UPDATE
A roundup of local and international news.
Newsroom, 16.06.2026, 20:00
GOVERNMENT– Negotiations in Bucharest for forming a new government, led by the designated prime minister Adrian Veștea, seemed on Tuesday to have reached a deadlock, and the situation remains uncertain, according to Romanian media. Veștea held meetings with smaller parliamentary groups – POT, PACE – Întâi România ( Romania First), Uniţi pentru România (United for Romania). The Democratic Alliance of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania (UDMR) decided it did not want to take part in the government in the configuration that was taking shape. Similar decisions had already been made by Veștea’s Liberal colleagues, as well as by their partners from USR. Veștea has made no further statements or online posts, and only speculation is circulating in the public space. We remind you that after a meeting on Monday, the Liberal president and current interim prime minister, Ilie Bolojan, also announced that the National Liberal Party (PNL) had decided, by a majority vote, not to support in Parliament the cabinet that their party colleague Adrian Veștea will put together. The main argument was that the nomination announced on Sunday by the president of the country, Nicușor Dan, was made without consulting PNL. The Liberals accused their first‑vice president of betrayal and of causing internal destabilization within the party.
HORMUZ – The United States has already signed a preliminary agreement to end the war in Iran, President Donald Trump announced, while Vice President J.D. Vance specified that the signature was electronic and that the actual signing ceremony will take place on Friday. Donald Trump noted that the agreement provides, among other things, for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which has been under blockade for more than three months, and that it guarantees Iran will not obtain nuclear weapons. After the announcement of the provisional agreement between the U.S. and Iran, fuel prices continued to fall. Within the European Union, Romania ranks 17th among the countries with the cheapest gasoline and 15th in terms of the lowest diesel prices.
DEFICIT – Romania’s current account deficit decreased by more than 12% in the first four months of the year, according to data published by the National Bank. The president of the Association of Financial‑Banking Analysts of Romania, Flavius Jakubowicz, warned that the adjustment is not the result of a strong increase in exports, but rather of a slowdown in domestic demand and imports. Transport, IT, and telecommunications services continue to generate a significant surplus in the external balance, and the National Bank’s foreign currency reserves remain at a comfortable level.
G7– The Kremlin stated on Tuesday that it had not received any official invitation from Kyiv for a possible meeting between the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskky, and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, during the G7 summit in France, international news agencies report. The spokesperson of the Russian presidency, Dmitry Peskov, claims that there are no official communication channels between Moscow and Kyiv and that, if he is “willing to talk responsibly and seriously,” Zelenskky “may come to Moscow at any time.” The Ukrainian president announced the day before that he had proposed a meeting with Putin on the occasion of the G7 summit. According to the leader in Kyiv, “Europe and the United States agreed, but Russia has once again shown that it is not willing to engage in dialogue.”
FOOTBALL – Romania’s football champion, Universitatea Craiova will face the Belarusian team ML Vitebsk in the first qualifying round of the Champions League, according to the draw held on Tuesday at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. Universitatea will play the first leg on July 7 or 8, and the match may take place on neutral ground, as Belarusian teams have done in recent seasons. The decisive leg will be played in Craiova on July 14 or 15. In the same stage of the competition, the champion of the Republic of Moldova, FC Petrocub Hîncești, will play against the Albanians of KF Egnatia. In the first qualifying round of the Europa League, Romania’s runner‑up, Universitatea Cluj (north‑west), will play the first leg away on July 9 against Dynamo Kyiv of Ukraine. The second leg will be played in Romania on July 16. (EE)