Encyclopedia > Communist Party of the Republic of Moldova
Politics of This article refers to the Republic of Moldova. For information about the adjacent Romanian region, see Moldavia; for other uses see Moldova (disambiguation) The Republic of Moldova is a landlocked country in eastern Europe, located between Romania to the west and Ukraine to the east. Its border with Romania follows...
Moldova
This article needs cleanup. Please edit this article to conform to a higher standard of article quality. Mircea Snegur was elected president of Moldova in October 1990 by the Parliament. A former Communist Party official, he endorsed independence and actively sought Western recognition. Moldova declared its independence from the Soviet...
Politics of Moldova Political parties in Moldova lists political parties in Moldova. Moldova is a one party dominant state with the Communist Party of Moldova in power. Opposition parties are allowed, but are widely considered to have no real chance of gaining power. This might change at the next elections. The parties Christian...
Political parties in Moldova Politics of Moldova Categories: Election related stubs | Elections in Moldova ...
Elections in Moldova
Transnistria or Transdniester (Russian: Приднестровье (Pridnestrovye), Romanian Transnistria, referred to as Stânga Nistrului (Left Bank of the Nistru) by official Moldovan sources). Transnistria is a region in eastern Europe. The name comes from it being...
Transnistria: Politics of Moldova Categories: Politics stubs | Lists of political parties | Transnistrian political parties ...
Political parties in Transnistria Politics of Moldova Categories: Election related stubs | Elections in Transnistria ...
Elections in Transnistria
The Communist Party of Moldova ( The Moldovan language (Limba moldovenească, ISO 639 codes: mol, mo; Ethnologue code: none), the official language of Moldova, is generally considered to be the Romanian language renamed due to political reasons, in an attempt to fight what the Moldovan government calls Romanian expansionism. It is spoken by about 3...
Moldovan: Partidul Comuniştilor din Republica Moldova) is the current ruling political party in This article refers to the Republic of Moldova. For information about the adjacent Romanian region, see Moldavia; for other uses see Moldova (disambiguation) The Republic of Moldova is a landlocked country in eastern Europe, located between Romania to the west and Ukraine to the east. Its border with Romania follows...
Moldova. It has 71 of 101 seats in the Parliament of Moldova, and provides the President Vladimir Nicolae Voronin (born May 25, 1941) has been the President of Moldova since April 7, 2001. He is the leader of the Party of the Communists of the Republic of Moldova (PCRM) which holds 71 of the 101 seats in the Moldovan parliament, the largest of the three parties...
Vladimir Voronin, the Prime Minister Vasile Petru Tarlev (born October 6, 1963) is the Prime Minister of Moldova. He studied as an engineer, and became a member of assorted economic councils. He was appointed Prime Minister on April 19, 2001. He is a Communist. Categories: People stubs | 1963 births | Moldovan politicians ...
Vasile Tarlev, and the speaker of the Parliament Eugenia Ostapciuc.
See also
This article needs cleanup. Please edit this article to conform to a higher standard of article quality. Mircea Snegur was elected president of Moldova in October 1990 by the Parliament. A former Communist Party official, he endorsed independence and actively sought Western recognition. Moldova declared its independence from the Soviet...
Politics of Moldova
Political parties in Moldova lists political parties in Moldova. Moldova is a one party dominant state with the Communist Party of Moldova in power. Opposition parties are allowed, but are widely considered to have no real chance of gaining power. This might change at the next elections. The parties Christian...
List of political parties in Moldova
The CommunistParty of the United States was considered within the political mainstream during the 1930s and 1940s, but was declared illegal for a time at the advent of the Cold War.
Members of communistparties were persecuted in many countries in the early Cold War period, when anticommunist sentiment was fueled by Western governments as part of their Cold War strategy.
The doctrine of ruling communistparties was typically that all property would belong to the state as the transition to a communist society (see socialism and state capitalism), and that the state would highly regulate all commerce in the country in the meantime.