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Victor Ponta : ウィキペディア英語版
Victor Ponta

|birth_place = Bucharest, Romania
|death_date =
|death_place =
|party = Social Democratic Party
|otherparty = Social Liberal Union
|spouse = Roxana Ponta
Daciana Sârbu
|children = 2
|alma_mater = University of Bucharest
National Defence University
|religion = Romanian Orthodoxy〔Daniel Stroe, ("Romanian Orthodox Church Disapproves of Religiously Motivated Political Debates" ), ''Independent Balkan News Agency'', 5 August 2014; accessed 8 August 2014〕
|signature = Signature of Victor Ponta.svg
|footnotes = ×
|website =
}}
Victor-Viorel Ponta ((:ˈviktor ˈponta); born 20 September 1972) is a Romanian jurist and politician, who served as Prime Minister of Romania between his appointment by President Traian Băsescu in May 2012 and his resignation in November 2015 following the Colectiv nightclub fire. A member of the Social Democratic Party (PSD) and its leader from 2010 to 2015, he was also joint leader (2012–2014) of the then-governing Social Liberal Union (USL), an alliance with the National Liberal Party (PNL). Ponta has been a member of the Romanian Chamber of Deputies for Gorj County since 2004. In the Emil Boc cabinet, he was Minister-Delegate for Relations with Parliament from 2008 to 2009.
Ponta began his time as head of government with a victory for his alliance in local elections, as well as criticism from civil society after several prominent Băsescu-associated figures in government-funded culture and history institutes were removed or resigned from their posts. Eventually, a political crisis broke out with the replacement of the heads of each legislative chamber and an attempt to dismiss Băsescu – an effort that ultimately failed when the subsequent impeachment referendum was invalidated by the Constitutional Court due to low turnout. Meanwhile, Ponta was the subject of controversy due to allegations of plagiarism in his doctoral thesis. Seven months after gaining office, Ponta helped lead the USL to a decisive victory in parliamentary elections, prompting his appointment to a full four-year term as premier. A little over a year later, the USL fell apart and Ponta formed a new cabinet with the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR) as coalition partners.
A finalist in the November 2014 presidential election, Ponta lost to PNL candidate Klaus Iohannis. The following month, the UDMR quit government, prompting Ponta to form a fourth cabinet, with the Conservative Party (PC) and the Liberal Reformist Party (PLR) as junior partners, which would last until Ponta's resignation and the dissolution of this government.
== Early career, election to parliament and ministerial post ==
According to Ponta, his family, originally called ''Ponte'', originated in Trieste, and reached Transylvania around the turn of the 20th century, in order to help build a road from Pecica to Nădlac commissioned by the Austro-Hungarian authorities.〔 Alina Boghiceanu, ("Portretul lui Victor Ponta, candidatul PSD la alegerile prezidenţiale" ("Portrait of Victor Ponta, PSD Presidential Election Candidate") ), ''Adevărul'', 25 September 2014; accessed 14 November 2014〕 Meanwhile, he has also claimed ancestry in the Albanian village of Moscopole,〔 Mircea Marian, ("Aflat la Tirana, Ponta a spus că familia bunicului său a venit în România din satul albanez Moscopole" ("While in Tirana, Ponta Says His Grandfather's Family Came to Romania from Albanian Village of Moscopole") ), ''Evenimentul Zilei'', 18 March 2014; accessed 17 November 2014〕 and this has been described as Aromanian descent on the maternal side.〔 Marius Diaconescu, ("Cine sunt aromânii?" ("Who Are the Aromanians?") ), ''Historia'', May 2014; accessed 28 November 2014〕 Victor Ponta was born in Bucharest, completing secondary studies in 1991 at the city's Ion Neculce High School. In 1995, he graduated from the University of Bucharest's Law faculty. He received a degree from the Carol I National Defence University in 2002, and in 2003 received a doctorate in Criminal Law from the University of Bucharest and a master's degree in Political Management from the Social Democratic Institute.〔 He has written several books in his field, including one on the International Criminal Court, the subject of his doctoral thesis. Between 1996 and 1999, and since 2002, he has taught Criminal Law at the Romanian-American University. From 1995 to 1998, Ponta worked as a prosecutor handling cases at the Sector 1 courthouse. From 1998 to 2001, he was a prosecutor at the Supreme Court of Justice in the anti-corruption division, in particular dealing with economic and financial crimes. From 2000 to 2001, he coordinated the Bureau for Combating Money Laundering.〔 (Profile at the Romanian Government site ); accessed 22 June 2009〕
In April 2002, Cristian Panait, a prosecutor involved in cases connected to then-Prime Minister Adrian Năstase, fell from the third-floor window of his home. He died the following day, and the incident was ruled a suicide a day later.〔〔 Iulian Andrei Crăciun, ("România în vremea 'Atotputernicului'" ("Romania in the Time of 'The All-Powerful'") ), ''Adevărul'', 21 June 2012; accessed 4 April 2014〕 The following January, his aunt filed suit to contest the fact that no charges were filed, claiming his superiors pushed him toward suicide. The complained also mentioned Panait's fellow prosecutor Ponta, claiming the former had told her, "that dog Victor Ponta did me in". She also said the two had been friends until Panait accused Ponta of influence peddling due to what he saw as the latter's involvement with underworld figures. In reply, Ponta mentioned he had called for the investigation into Panait's death to be reopened, stating the two had not met for some six months before that event, and that there had been no breach in their friendship.〔 ("'Câinele de Victor Ponta m-a aranjat!'" ("'The Dog Victor Ponta Did Me In!'") ), ''Evenimentul Zilei'', 10 January 2003; accessed 4 April 2014〕 Prior to the 2012 legislative election, opposition campaigner Adriean Videanu charged that Ponta's "blackmail" and "threats" had pushed Panait to kill himself.〔 Alina Novaceanu, ("Videanu: În 2002, prin ameninţări, Ponta l-a determinat pe procurorul Cristian Panait să se sinucidă" ("Videanu: In 2002, Using Threats, Ponta Pushed Prosecutor Cristian Panait to Suicide") ), ''Gândul'', 6 December 2012; accessed 4 April 2014〕
From 2001 to 2004, Ponta held the rank of Secretary of State as head of the government's Control Department.〔 In 2006, a civil servant at the Ministry of Education (who was in an ongoing feud with Ponta) charged that Ponta, while holding this office, covered up corrupt activities undertaken by former minister Hildegard Puwak, who was cleared of wrongdoing in a report issued by Ponta.〔 George Lăcătuş, ("Ponta, acuzat că a tăcut în cazul Puwak" ("Ponta, Accused of Silence in the Puwak Case") ), ''Cotidianul'', 26 November 2006; accessed 22 June 2009〕 Additionally, he helped uncover cases of fraudulent use of Phare funds.〔 ("Echipa lui Victor Ponta a găsit două cazuri de utilizare frauduloasă a fondurilor Phare" ("Victor Ponta's Team Helps Uncover Two Cases of Fraudulent Use of Phare Funds") ), ''Adevărul'', 8 February 2003; accessed 22 June 2009〕 In 2001 he also joined the supervisory council of the Authority for State Assets Recovery, and that year he was part of a special committee investigating penal infractions committed by members of the government. In March 2004, he became Minister-Delegate for Control of International Grant Programmes Implementation and for Monitoring the Application of the Acquis Communautaire. A PSD member by 2002, he was from July to November of that year head of the Interim National Council of the Social Democratic Youth (TSD). That October, he became a member of the PSD's national council, and joined its executive bureau the following month, when he also became president of the TSD, remaining as such for four years. In 2005, he became a vice president of Ecosy, while he has been a vice president of the PSD since December 2006. At the 2004 election, Ponta won a seat in the Chamber of Deputies, where he served as both secretary and vice president of its permanent bureau;〔 he was re-elected in 2008.〔 (Election results ), alegeri.tv; accessed 22 June 2009〕 That December, he became a minister in the incoming Boc cabinet.〔 ("Guvern de regăţeni, cu 'moţ' ardelean" ("Old Kingdom Government, with a Few Transylvanians") ), ''Adevărul'', 19 December 2008; accessed 22 June 2009〕
Upon winning confirmation, Ponta pledged to reduce the number of emergency ordinances issued by the government and to assist Parliament in exercising control over the cabinet.〔 ("Comisiile au avizat nominalizarea lui Victor Ponta ca ministru pentru Relaţia cu Parlamentul" ("Committees Approve Victor Ponta's Nomination as Minister for Relations with Parliament") ), Mediafax, 20 December 2008; accessed 22 June 2009〕 Among his activities was to help steer a new civil and penal code through Parliament.〔 ("Ponta: Codurile civil şi penal vor fi finalizate până la 15 mai" ("Ponta: Civil and Penal Codes to be Finalised by 15 May") ), Mediafax, 22 April 2009; accessed 22 June 2009〕 Among the more controversial provisions in these codes that Ponta defended (both as minister and as head of the parliamentary committee drafting the legislation) were one presuming that any defensive act done at night at home would be considered legitimate self-defence;〔 ("Victor Ponta: 'Orice act de apărare, noaptea, se prezumă legitimă apărare'" ("Victor Ponta: 'Any Act of Defence at Night Is Considered Legitimate Defence'") ), ''Cotidianul'', 25 March 2009; accessed 22 June 2009〕 and one banning therapeutic abortions after the 24th week of pregnancy, which received sharp criticism from several NGOs.〔 Oana Botezatu, Geta Roman, ("Avortul, după comisia Ponta" ("Abortion, According to the Ponta Commission") ), ''Evenimentul Zilei'', 7 May 2009; accessed 22 June 2009〕 Ponta, nicknamed "Little Titulescu" by Năstase,〔 ("Micul Titulescu – singur acasă" ("Little Titulescu – Home Alone") ), ''Evenimentul Zilei'', 23 September 2005; accessed 22 June 2009〕〔 Laura Ciobanu, ("Adrian Năstase: Victor Ponta nu mai seamănă cu Titulescu" ("Adrian Năstase: Victor Ponta No Longer Resembles Titulescu") ), ''Evenimentul Zilei'', 4 December 2013; accessed 16 June 2015〕 has been known to criticise both members of his own party, commenting that then-mayor of Sector 5 Marian Vanghelie (known for his gaffes) "is such a philosopher that not even I can understand him";〔 ("Ponta: Vanghelie e atât de filosof încât nici eu nu pot să îl înţeleg" ("Ponta: Vanghelie Is Such a Philosopher That Not Even I Can Understand Him") ), Mediafax, 2 May 2009; accessed 22 June 2009〕 and of the PD-L, remarking, after the two parties had entered a governing coalition, that his Gorj County parliamentary colleagues are "parrots, liars and dimwits".〔 ("Ponta despre parlamentarii PDL de Gorj: "Papagali, mincinoşi şi proşti"" ("Ponta Regarding Gorj County PDL Parliamentarians: 'Parrots, Liars and Dimwits'") ), Mediafax, 28 January 2009;
accessed 22 June 2009〕 Together with his PSD colleagues, Ponta resigned from the cabinet on 1 October 2009, in protest at the dismissal of vice prime minister and Interior Minister Dan Nica.〔 ("Miniştrii PSD şi-au depus demisiile la cabinetul premierului Emil Boc" ("PSD Ministers Submit Their Resignations in the Office of Prime Minister Emil Boc") ), Mediafax, 1 October 2009; accessed 1 October 2009〕

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