Nicusor Dan, Third Force Leader, Quits Over Family Bill
* The leader of the Save Romania Union, the third force in Romania's parliament, has quit over the party's decision to oppose a controversial bill, redefining the family in the constitution.
Save Romania Union, the third strongest force in parliament, faces a leadership crisis after its leader, Nicusor Dan, resigned abruptly on Wednesday night.
He quit after the party leadership urged its MPs to vote against a bill redefining the family in strictly heterosexual terms in the constitution.
Dan repeatedly disagreed with the decision of the party’s National Bureau to ask all its MPs to vote against modification of the constitution in the Chamber of Deputies. The vote is expected to take place soon after June 7.
Dan did not make any public statements after resigning but posted a message on Facebook, reading: “The National Bureau made a decision. That’s the only news for today.”
USR spokesman Dan Barna confirmed that the debate had been tense on Wednesday over whether the party should adopt a general stance on the bill, or allow its MPs a free vote.
“Obviously it was all very heated and tense. Nicusor Dan’s resignation was among the issues discussed. There was no resignation registered per se, but it was one of the things said during the tense debate on the topic and the impact of this position,” he said.
Barna said he hoped that Dan would change his mind.
Dan, a civic activist and math teacher who garnered much support while running for the post of mayor of Bucharest in June 2016, founded the USR with Clothilde Armand, who ran for the post of mayor of Bucharest’s District 1.
After the party attracted many young professionals from the technocratic government of Dacian Ciolos and made it into parliament, Dan’s leadership became contested for not welcoming the former Prime Minister as a party member.
Nevertheless, the USR leader was re-elected in May.
Party co-founder Armand conceded that the party contains many conservatives and Christian Democrats who would not agree with the National Bureau's decision.
The bill redefining the family in the constitution as a “union between a man and a woman” passed the Senate by a landslide.
However, only two USR Senators voted in favour of changing the constitutions. Dan refused to express his vote.
The bill was submitted in 2015 by the Coalition for the Family, a group of conservative NGOs, backed by the Church, that intends to ensure same-sex marriage remains outlawed in Romania.
The NGOs raised 3 million signatures in support of their campaign. Both the ruling Social Democrat Party and the main opposition National Liberal Party agreed to back the bill.