Romanian Democratic Convention Convenția Democrată Română | |
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Abbreviation | CDR |
Leader | Corneliu Coposu Ion Rațiu Ion Diaconescu Emil Constantinescu |
Founded | 26 November 1991 |
Dissolved | December 2000 |
Ideology | Liberal democracy Conservative liberalism Christian democracy Neoliberalism Environmentalism |
Political position | Centre to centre-right |
Colours | Yellow Blue |
Slogan | Romanian: Cheia e la tine! (You hold the key) |
The Romanian Democratic Convention (Romanian: Convenția Democrată Română or Convenția Democratică Română; abbreviated CDR) was an electoral alliance of several democratic, anti-communist, anti-totalitarian, and centre-right political parties in Romania, active from 1991 until 2000. The most prominent leaders of the CDR throughout the 1990s were by far Corneliu Coposu, Ion Rațiu, and Ion Diaconescu, all three members of the Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party (PNȚCD) - successor and political heir to the National Peasants' Party (PNȚ), active in the Kingdom of Romania between 1926 and 1948).
The name of the CDR was coined by Sergiu Cunescu, the leader of the Romanian Social Democratic Party (PSDR), as stated in an interview during the 1990s by former PNL re-founding president Radu Câmpeanu at Marius Tucă Show by talk show journalist Marius Tucă.[1] An additional minor leader of the Romanian Democratic Convention (CDR) was lawyer and MP Niculae Cerveni (who founded PNL-CD in 1992 and subsequently ran for president on behalf of PLDR in 2000).