Liviu Negoiță

For the Romanian footballer, see Liviu Negoiţă (footballer).
Liviu Gheorghe Negoiţă
Mayor of Sectorul 3
In office
June 2004  June 2012
Succeeded by Robert Negoiță
Member of the Chamber of Deputies of Romania
In office
December 1996  June 2004
Constituency 42 - Bucureşti
Personal details
Born (1962-03-22) March 22, 1962
Brăila, Romania
Nationality Romanian
Political party Democratic Liberal Party
Spouse(s) Carmen Negoiţă
Alma mater University of Bucharest
Profession Lawyer, Politician
Website http://www.liviunegoita.ro/

Liviu Gheorghe Negoiţă (born March 22, 1962) is a Romanian politician and lawyer, member of the Democratic Liberal Party and the former mayor of Bucharest's Sector 3.

Biography

Born in Brăila, Negoiţă completed his law degree in 1990, at University of Bucharest's Faculty of Law and was a practising lawyer. Aside from Romanian, he speaks English and Italian.[1] He married Carmen in 2005, his wedding godfather being Adriean Videanu, a leader of his party.[2]

Political career

Member of the Chamber of Deputies

Negoiţă won a seat in the Chamber of Deputies of Romania in the Romanian legislative election, 1996 on the lists of National Liberal Party - Democratic Convention. In 1998, he resigned from the National Liberal Party and joined the Democratic Party.[3] In the 2000 elections, he was re-elected on the lists of the Democratic Party, being a deputy until 2004.[4]

Mayor of Bucharest's Sector 3

Liviu Negoiţă was the candidate of the Democratic Party for mayor of Bucharest's Sector 3, Bucharest's most populous sector, winning the 2004 elections, keeping his seat after he won the 2008 local elections with 79,05%. During his management, the town hall built 300 playgrounds and a large number of parking spaces.[5] He lost the elections in 2012.

Candidate for Prime-Minister

After the fall of the Boc government, Băsescu designated Lucian Croitoru as Prime-Minister, but the parliamentary majority voted against him, continuing to insist on Klaus Iohannis as Prime Minister. On November 6, 2009 president Traian Băsescu, associated with PD-L, nominated him as candidate for Prime Minister of Romania.[6] His chosen cabinet was however almost identical to the one of Croitoru.[7]

However, the Democratic Liberal Party had no parliamentary majority and the Parliament surpassed the 14-day limit for the hearing the members of Negoiţă's cabinet, thus extending the political deadlock in Romania and leaving Emil Boc in office as acting Prime Minister until the presidential election.

After Băsescu's win in the election, he re-nominated Negoiţă as a candidate for Prime Minister of Romania,[7] however, he is expected to give up as a solution to the deadlock.[8]

Controversies and criticism

Public works contracts

Controversies arose during his terms as mayor of Bucharest 3rd sector because many public works contracts were won by companies owned by his friends, relatives or members of his party, the PD-L.

The waste collection, car towing and landscaping services are provided by Rosal, a company owned by PD-L politician Silviu Prigoană, who also is associated in another company with Negoiţă's wife.[9]

ACM 93, a company which won road building and maintenance contracts of over 200 million lei (€50 million), is owned by Ionel Pirpiliu, the brother of Ştefan Pirpiliu, a PD-L politician and friend of Negoiţă. The way many of the contracts were awarded to this company has been criticised by Evenimentul Zilei, because there were no competitive bids, being simple additional documents to older contracts.[10]

In one case, companies owned by Prigoană won contracts for providing Platanus trees at a price of 30 lei per tree, but, through an additional document, the price was changed to 1,500-2,400 lei, more than 50 times higher than the initial price, whereas the common retail prices on the market are currently around 100-300 lei.[11]

Criticism of his initiatives

Criticism came from Jurnalul Naţional, over the area of greenery which was removed for the creation of parking lots or buildings.[12]

Another initiative for which Negoiţă was criticised by Gândul was spending large amounts of money for overpriced fixtures, such as spending €4 million for 'coloured public fountains',[9] while at the same time, the town hall borrowed €70 million.[5]

References

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