Roemenië maakt U-bocht over kandidaat-commissaris (en)

Bucharest has put forward a new candidate for the job of Romania's EU commissioner after the previous nominee withdrew due to concerns in Brussels over his European credentials.

Romanian media suggest the country's EU negotiator Leonard Orban is the new commissioner-designate after liberal senator Varujan Vosganian withdrew from the running for the top job on Saturday (28 October).

The withdrawal followed last week's meeting with European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso, which failed to result in his official nomination, unlike the case in Bulgaria's nomination of Meglena Kuneva.

Mr Vosganian was accused by domestic media of past contacts with the communist Romanian secret service - the Securitate - while Brussels was not impressed with his lack of experience in EU affairs and some prominent socialists in the European Parliament questioned his business links.

Playing down the allegations, Mr Vosganian stepped aside arguing he did not want to cause a delay in the appointment of the Romanian commissioner and to damage his country's image abroad.

Romanian prime minister Calin Popescu-Tariceanu welcomed the gesture, saying he believed the media speculations about Mr Vosganian's past "do not have any real basis and that all of this will be clarified in the near future."

The European Commission president is set to consider a new candidate this week - with Leonard Orban, Romania's deputy European Affairs minister and the country's previous chief negotiator with the EU having the best chance, according to Romanian press.

The other personality featuring in media reports, foreign minister Mihai Razvan Ungureanu, said on Sunday that he had turned down the offer as he wanted to continue in his current job in Bucharest instead, Realitatea TV reported.

The EU executive is set to announce the Romanian nominee and his portfolio early this week, with a European Parliament hearing of the two new members of the college scheduled for November and the MEPs' official vote to take place in December.

The Bulgarian commissioner designate, Ms Kuneva, has been appointed to take over the consumer protection portfolio, but it is not yet clear which will area her future Romanian colleague will cover.


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