
Romania Government Talks Hit Roadblock Over Fiscal Measures
Romanian leaders hit a last-minute snag in talks to form a new government as negotiators deadlocked over how to narrow the Balkan nation's budget deficit. The currency fell.
President Nicusor Dan had been expected to designated a prime minister on Friday. But the new head of state is putting that off until he secures a deal between pro-European parties on a fiscal plan, according to people familiar with the talks who asked not to be named as they take place behind closed doors.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Tristan Tate faces probe over alleged Romanian election interference
Romanian authorities have launched an investigation into British-American influencer Tristan Tate over allegations he broke election laws by posting political content on social media during the country's recent presidential elections. The probe, confirmed by police sources, is centred on a social media post that Tate is alleged to have shared on election day and included direct or implicit political messaging, which is illegal in Romania. Tate, 36, is the younger brother of controversial influencer Andrew Tate, 38, a self-described misogynist. The pair have a combined social media following of over 13 million. Both are being investigated by Romanian authorities in a separate case in relation to a number of charges, which they deny. The latest investigation was opened by Ilfov county police after it received an official complaint. It is alleged that Tate may have tried to influence voters through the social media post, which may constitute offences of foreign election interference and campaigning during restricted periods. He has been summoned for questioning on Tuesday. Andrew is not involved in this case, according to official sources. The BBC has contacted Tate's representatives for comment. He has not issued any public statement regarding the investigation. But in a video post apparently published on X on the day of the election, Tate says he is "not campaigning" and that as "an American man, using an American platform, in Dubai, to talk about political issues" he is "not subject to Romania's 'no campaigning' law". In recent years, the Tate brothers have built a massive online presence on social media. They have attracted frequent criticism over offensive statements about women. Both were arrested in Romania in December 2022, with Andrew accused of rape and human trafficking and Tristan suspected of human trafficking. They both denied the charges and spent several months under house arrest. A year and a half later, in August 2024, they faced new allegations in Romania including sex with a minor and trafficking underage persons, all of which they deny. They are also facing 21 charges in the UK, including rape, actual bodily harm and human trafficking. At the time of an arrest warrant obtained by Bedfordshire Police in March 2024, the Tates said they "categorically reject all charges" and were "very innocent men". A Romanian court ruled that they could be extradited to the UK only once the separate proceedings against them in Romania concluded. Prosecutors unexpectedly lifted a two-year travel ban earlier this year, after which the brothers travelled from Romania to the US state of Florida by private jet in February 2025. They returned to Romania in March 2025, telling reporters that "innocent men don't run from anything".


New York Times
11 hours ago
- New York Times
Senator Ron Johnson Resists G.O.P. Megabill, Warning It Will Swell Debt
President Trump had some blunt advice for Senator Ron Johnson, the Wisconsin Republican who had been publicly excoriating his signature tax and spending bill as a deficit-driving debacle, at a tense White House meeting this month. Be nice, the president told the businessman-turned-ultraconservative politician. Mr. Johnson immediately toned down his vocal drumbeat of criticism against the plan. But he still looms as a significant obstacle to the sweeping domestic policy bill that Senate Republicans hope to push through next week. Not only does he declare himself adamantly opposed to the current version, he is simultaneously undercutting the party's message that the legislation will not pile on to federal deficits. He is, however, trying to be nicer about it. 'I'm a pretty flexible, reasonable guy,' the sometimes disputatious, three-term Republican referred to on Capitol Hill as 'RonJohn' told reporters on Wednesday, drawing scoffs of disbelief. 'I am!' Mr. Johnson put his accounting background to work in a dense, 30-page report he released this week that rejects claims by the administration and Republican leaders that the combination of continued tax cuts, spending reductions in the range of $1.5 trillion over 10 years and new policies will spur growth to offset lost tax revenue. Under almost any scenario, his report says, deficits will continue to soar above $2 trillion per year, for a cumulative $20 trillion or more over the 10-year life span of the bill. That is in line with — though substantially more favorable than — estimates by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and fiscal research groups that have found that the costs of the bill would swamp any growth it could create. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Bloomberg
13 hours ago
- Bloomberg
Spain's Indra Downplays Franco-German Sparring Over Fighter Jet
Indra Sistemas SA 's chairman sought to assuage doubts over Europe's next-generation fighter-jet program, after disagreements between partners Dassault Aviation SA and Airbus SE broke into the open this week. 'There are tensions regarding who does a little more or who does a little less. But the project is on track and is moving forward according to the plan,' Indra's Ángel Escribano said in an interview in Madrid. 'We would like it to be a little more smooth.'