As a political analyst, Geovanny regularly appears on leading international news outlets including
CNN,
The Washington Post,
Washington Examiner,
Newsweek,
HuffPost,
The Jerusalem Post,
BBC's
World Business Report,
Infobae, and Mundo Hispánico, in both Spanish and English, about the United States, Latin America, and Europe. He has been a strong advocate of
climate change remedies and the importance of developing sustainability Also, Vicente Romero writes a column in CNN,
Infobae,
El Diario La Prensa,
La Opinión,
El Nuevo Día,
La Prensa Gráfica and
El Telégrafo. He has been a featured writer for the
Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and international news agencies such as Mexico's El Universal, among others. He worked for the Ministry of Public Administration of the Dominican Republic as public policy analyst going on to become the interim Director of the Dominican civil service for a couple of months. Vicente Romero also taught two law classes per semester at
Universidad Central del Este for 5 years. He is the founder of the Center for Public Policy, Development, and Leadership of the Dominican Republic (CPDL-RD), and the recipient of the Dominican Republic's Provincial Youth Award in Professional Leadership granted by the Dominican Presidency and Ministry of Youth. Romero also received the Robert E. Lesher scholarship granted by
Carlos Rosario International Public Charter School, in
Washington, D.C., in 2017.
Democracy and elections Geovanny has worked in partnership with
New York University through the DC Dialogues series, an academic initiative that addresses topics such as development, business, governance and democracy. During these discussions, Geovanny has moderated dialogues with the Secretary General of the
Organization of American States Luis Almagro, The Dominican Republic's President
Luis Abinader, Costa Rica's President
Carlos Alvarado, Colombia's former President
Alvaro Uribe, El Salvador's Vice-president Felix Ulloa,
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars's Latin American Program Director Dr. Cynthia J. Arnson,
National Endowment for Democracy's Director for Latin America and the Caribbean Miriam Kornblith,
Inter-American Dialogue's President
Michael Shifter, Puerto Rican Mayor
María Meléndez, among others. Vicente Romero has worked as an international election observer. He was one of the observers during the launch of the first sample-based election monitoring in the United States, Observe D.C., an initiative of
Georgetown University that came out during the mid-term elections of 2018. He has observed
elections in the United States, El Salvador, Dominican Republic, among other countries. In February 2019, he observed the presidential election in El Salvador through the electoral observation mission of the Organization of American States.
Civil society experience Founder and Chairperson of the Center of Public Policy, Leadership and Development (since its inception in Santo Domingo in 2013), a non-profit, non-governmental organization. This is a
think tank, based in the Dominican Republic, that promotes strong institutions and democracy by generating policy research, promoting ideas, and fostering discussion between the public and policymakers. Since 2014, the center has been invited by the Organization of American States (OAS) to represent the Dominican Republic's civil society in the National Consultation with Civil Society and Social Actors in occasion of the Summit of the Americas. On 6 July 2019, the City Council of Azua de Compostela and its Mayor Rafael Hidalgo awarded Geovanny Vicente Romero the honor of "Hijo Adoptivo de la Ciudad de Azua" (Adopted Son of Azua City) through the resolution No. 19-2019. After
Operation Car Wash ended with the court sentencing
Marcelo Odebrecht to 19 years in prison, several Latin American countries opened their own investigations. In the Dominican Republic, former congressman, Manual Manuel Jiménez filed an official complaint in February 2017. He partially based his file on Geovanny Vicente Romero's article about the Odebrecht case, which also served as evidence in the lawsuit. In his article, Vicente Romero claims that the Dominican Republic received the second largest bribe from Odebrech (after Venezuela). As prosecutors throughout Latin America started to investigate the Odebrecht bribes seriously, top-ranking officials, businessmen and even presidents seem to have been involved: Peru, for example ordered the arrest of the former president
Alejandro Toledo. As a conclusion of the investigation in the Dominican Republic, nearly a dozen people were arrested on 29 May 2017. ==Personal life==