Moldovan Socialists Topple Govt in No-Confidence Vote

Prime Minister Maia Sandu's cabinet was ousted on Tuesday when it lost a no-confidence motion by 101 to 63 votes, only five months after it came to office.

It was defeated by the combined votes of the pro-Russian Socialist Party, PSRM, and the Democratic Party which was led until recently by the oligarch Vlad Plahotniuc.

The main issue at stake was the attempt to appoint a new General Prosecutor.

The process was launched last week but then was cancelled by the Justice Minister Olesea Stamate after she said she realised that the results were about to be rigged by Socialist representatives on the selection panel, as she claimed has happened before.

The government led by Sandu came to office on June 8 this year, after the PSRM and the pro-European ACUM bloc signed a temporary agreement and formed a parliamentary majority that was described as an "unholy alliance".

The coalition committed itself to root out oligarch Plahotniuc's influence, especially in the judiciary, and to free the state institutions from political control.

Before the no-confidence vote, Sandu expressed anger that the PSRM was now seeking to bring down the administration.

"You are so cowardly that you cannot say openly that you are afraid of true justice. You betrayed not only a government, but also the people who put their hopes in you," Sandu told her former governmental partners.

The PSRM filed the no-confidence motion in the cabinet led by Sandu on November 6 after the government launched a new amendment to the Law on the Prosecutor's Office, part of attempts to reform the judiciary, which are backed by the EU.

The Socialists said that Sandu's cabinet had demonstrated total political and professional inability to solve current problems and to...

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