Romania's left-wing Prime Minister Mihai Tudose resigned today after losing the backing of his party due to internal power struggles, barely seven months after his predecessor suffered the same fate.
He handed in his resignation this evening after senior members of the ruling Social Democrats (PSD) voted to withdraw their support at a leadership meeting.
"I am leaving with my head held high. I'm going to get my things at parliament," Tudose told journalists after handing in his resignation at the party meeting.
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It is the second time in a year that the PSD has torpedoed its own government.
In June, the party filed a no-confidence motion in then- prime minister Sorin Grindeanu, after he fell out with powerful PSD boss Liviu Dragnea, 55.
Dragnea, who is barred from running for office because of a fraud conviction, is widely acknowledged to pull the strings behind the scenes.
The party chief nominated former economy minister Tudose as Grindeanu's successor, but their relationship also turned into an increasingly bitter sparring match in recent months.
Tudose's resignation will have to be signed off by centre-right President Klaus Iohannis. He also needs to approve the PSD's new prime ministerial nominee, to be chosen at a party meeting tomorrow.
Back in October, Iohannis expressed doubt over the "PSD's ability to govern" given its shaky track record in government.
It is the third major crisis to hit the party since it rode back into power in December 2016, barely a year after being forced from office over a deadly nightclub blaze blamed on corruption.
In February, Romania's largest protests since the fall of communism forced the government to drop a bill aimed at watering down anti-corruption laws that critics said would have helped Dragnea himself.
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