The Constitutional Court of Moldova has ruled to suspend President Igor Dodon's powers, according to Ziarul de Garda edition.
Earlier on December 28, 2017, the ruling Democratic Party has appealed to the Constitutional Court requesting that the court state the circumstances making it possible to temporarily suspend presidential powers, Ziarul de Garda reports.
The deputies’ request comes as a result of Dodon’s repeated decline to endorse candidates for government posts set forward by Pavel Filip’s Cabinet. The president claimed that the candidates did not fit the posts while some of them had directly or indirectly been involved in bank embezzlement.
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To have the vacancies filled, the Democratic Party on December 28 filed a suit with the Constitutional Court, which on January 2 ruled to suspend Dodon’s powers to appoint new ministers.
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Previously, there has already been a precedent when the Moldovan president was suspended from office. In October, the new defense minister was endorsed bypassing the president. In order to appoint a minister whose post had been vacant since last December, the powers of the head of state had to be suspended. The Constitutional Court of the Republic of Moldova on October 17 ruled that the Minister of Defense would be appointed by decree of the Parliament Speaker rather than by a President’s Decree. Three days later the court adopted another unprecedented decision - to suspend presidential powers.