October 6, 2025
A roundup of local and world news

Newsroom, 06.10.2025, 13:55
WEATHER Romania is facing days of heavy rain, wind and snowfall in the mountains. The most severe phenomena are expected in the southeast, where starting on Tuesday night a code red rain alert will be in place until Wednesday night. Specialists warn that 110-120 litres of rain per square meter will accumulate. During the same period, a code orange alert is announced in the south, southeast, east and centre. In the Southern Carpathians, sleet and snow are expected at altitudes of over 1,700 metres.
PRESIDENCY The president of Romania Nicuşor Dan Monday announced the appointment of a team of presidential and state advisors. These appointments reflect the president’s commitment to a professional, efficient administration in full accordance with the priorities of the presidential mandate, the Presidency said. The team of advisors includes, among others, Marius Lazurca as presidential advisor on foreign policy, Valentin Naumescu as presidential advisor for European affairs, Ana-Maria Geană as state advisor for the Romanian diaspora, the former liberal PM Ludovic Orban as presidential advisor on domestic policy.
NOBEL The scientists Mary Brunkow and Fred Ramsdell, from the United States, and Shimon Sakaguchi, from Japan, won this year’s Nobel Prize in Medicine for groundbreaking work in peripheral immune tolerance. According to the Nobel committee, the trio’s discoveries laid the foundation for a new field of research and have spurred the development of new treatments, for example for cancer and autoimmune diseases. After the medicine prize, the Nobel season continues with the prize in physics on October 7, followed by the prize in chemistry on October 8, the literature prize on October 9 and the peace prize on October 10, the only one awarded in Oslo.
GOVERNMENT The ruling coalition in Romania, made up of the Social Democratic Party, the National Liberal Party, Save Romania Union and the Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania, may reach this week an agreed formula for administrative reform. The Liberal PM Ilie Bolojan, in his report on the first 100 days of his term in office, mentioned that the bill will be included in the 3rd set of fiscal measures to reduce the budget deficit, which is expected to be passed this month. Talks are resumed after the parties in the coalition clashed over the topic. The Social Democrats did not agree with the personnel cuts proposed by the Prime Minister, and insisted on cutting spending on goods and services. No consensus was reached, so the reform bill was not included in the second set of measures, for which the Government took responsibility before Parliament in early September. With the talks resumed, a proposal has emerged that the cuts for city halls and county councils should go hand in hand with the central administration, i.e. with governmental agencies and ministries, and the agreed option seems to be a combination of personnel downsizing and cutting operating expenses. The reform of the administration, with spending cuts and simplified bureaucracy, is included in the government program.
EU The vice-president of the European Parliament, Victor Negrescu (Romania), has made public an initiative initiative to support the stepped-up European Union accession of the Republic of Moldova. Together with 55 MEPs from 19 EU countries, Victor Negrescu signed a letter addressed to the president of the European Council, António Costa, calling for the immediate opening of accession negotiations. “The free and fair elections held last Sunday leave no room for doubt: the people of Moldova have reaffirmed their clear desire to join the EU. Their choice, made despite foreign pressure and disinformation campaigns, attests to their resilience and democratic determination. This is a turning point that requires an equally strong and prompt response from the Union,” the document reads. (AMP)