First mandate in 2003 in
Moscow in 2001 The PCRM won 50.07% of the vote and 71 of the 101 seats in the
February 2001 parliamentary election; by this time the constitution had been changed to provide for election of the President through the Parliament rather than popular vote. and on 4 April 2001 Voronin was elected as president by the Parliament. Of the 89 deputies participating in the vote, 71 voted for Voronin, 15 voted for
Dumitru Braghiş, and three voted for Valerian Cristea. He was sworn in at a ceremony in Chişinău on 7 April 2001. The
Constitutional Court ruled that the president could also lead a political party, and Voronin was re-elected as the PCRM's leader. In 2004, Voronin branded the leadership of
Transnistria "
a transnational criminal group", and ordered an economic
blockade of Transnistria after its authorities
closed several Romanian-speaking schools.
Second mandate and
Smirnov in
Barvikha on 18 February 2009, at which
Transnistria issues were discussed In the
parliamentary election in March 2005, the PCRM received 46.1% of the vote and won 56 seats in the 101-member Parliament — more than enough for the 51-vote minimum required to remain in government, but short of the 61 votes necessary to elect a president. However, President Voronin received the necessary support from the
Christian Democratic People's Party, the
Democratic and
Social Liberal factions, after he promised to deliver on needed reforms and
Euro-
Atlantic integration for the country. (The latter two factions broke away from the
Electoral Bloc "Moldova Democrată" following the election, leaving the
Our Moldova Alliance (AMN) of the former
mayor of Chişinău Serafim Urechean as the second-largest party in Parliament, with 26 seats.) In the presidential election held in Parliament on 4 April 2005, Voronin was re-elected with 75 votes; another candidate,
Gheorghe Duca, received one vote, and two votes were invalid.
Political agenda during tenure The declared main goals of his political agenda were: • Closer ties with the Russian Federation and "integration in Europe"; solving the
Transnistria conflict;
EU cooperation (and membership if possible); strong opposition to
NATO membership; independence, as opposed to a unification with
Romania.
Events of 2009 and resignation After the
parliamentary election held on 5 April 2009, the PCRM won 49.48% of the vote and 60 seats, one seat too few to elect a president. Voronin was elected
Speaker of the Parliament and retained the Presidency of Moldova with an
interim status. The police crackdown of the
civil unrest in April 2009 antagonized the society, and the communists were unable to secure
one additional vote out of the 41 MPs from the three opposition parties; a snap parliamentary election was necessary. In the
snap parliamentary election in July 2009, the PCRM won 44.69% of the vote, which is more votes than any other individual party, and gained 48 seats, but it lost its parliamentary majority to a
coalition of opposition parties which has 53 seats. However, the opposition also failed to obtain enough seats to elect a president, thereby producing more uncertainty. Voronin announced on 2 September 2009 that he intended to resign, saying that his position as acting President had become "ambiguous and doubtful". He resigned on 11 September 2009. The president sent a letter to Parliament confirming his intention to resign.
Mihai Ghimpu succeeded Voronin as acting president until a proper President could be elected. == Post-presidential years ==