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| - Romania's opposition Social Democrats (PSD) gained a better than expected result in parliamentary elections marred by record low turnout but are unlikely to be able to return to government, partial results released late Sunday showed. With 50 percent of votes counted, the PSD was on 30 percent, while the governing liberal PNL party was on 25 percent. However, the PSD will lack allies in the new parliament and President Klaus Iohannis -- long a PSD foe -- has said he wouldn't allow the party to return to government during his current term, which ends in 2024. More than 18 million Romanians were eligible to take part in the vote, carried out with the now familiar virus safety measures of social distancing, mask-wearing and hand disinfectant. But broad disillusion with Romania's political class along with a harsh second wave of the coronavirus pandemic depressed turnout, which stood at around 33 percent, a record low for a parliamentary election. After an earlier exit poll showed the PSD putting in an unexpectedly strong performance, PSD leader Marcel Ciolacu said: "I expect Orban's resignation, it's what Romanians have asked for with their votes." However, if the trends in the initial results are confirmed the PNL should still be on course to form a government in alliance with the smaller, recently formed USR-Plus party, which has so far won 15 percent. It can also ally with the small UDMR party representing the country's Hungarian minority, which is on course to win six percent and has said it wants to co-operate with the liberals. PNL Prime Minster Ludovic Orban noted that the result could be affected by votes cast by Romanians abroad, which will mostly be counted on Monday. Those living outside Romania are younger than average and thought to favour USR-Plus and its promise to clean up Romania's political scene. And they were more enthusiastic participants, with some 260,000 expatriate Romanians casting ballots, double the 2016 figure. Romania is one of the EU's poorest countries, and four million of its citizens have left in recent years to seek better lives elsewhere, in particular in western EU member states. In a region where populists and nationalists have recently gained ground, Orban had won some support by pledging to modernise Romania and keep it on a "pro-European" path. After casting his vote at a Bucharest school, 63-year-old retired electrician Gheorghe Preda said he had "no hope" of change. He said the two big parties "have been taking turns in power for 30 years and make lots of promises during the campaign, but forget them afterwards". But 104-year-old philosopher Mihai Sora, who won the admiration of many Romanians for doggedly turning out for hours during anti-corruption protests in recent years, said staying away from the polls was not an option. "I voted with trust and hope, in thinking of my country and the future of its people," he wrote in a Facebook post. Mother of two Adina Ionescu, 42, said she was hoping for "a government of young people, which cares about the environment and about Romanians' welfare". The PNL had the advantage of being supported by Iohannis, who brushed aside criticism that he disrespected his constitutional role by campaigning for the liberals. The left-wing PSD, heir to the former Communist Party, has dominated Romanian politics over the past 30 years. It won by a landslide in the previous election in 2016, but its years in power were marked by massive anti-corruption protests and spats with Brussels over controversial judicial reforms. The PSD has expressed opposition to some of the current anti-virus measures, although it has itself been criticised for lack of clarity in its own plan to combat the virus. Orban's government has said it will not reinstitute a full lockdown like the one imposed in the spring, but experts fear an explosion of cases in the weeks to come. mr-ii/jsk/je
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