Federation of the Jewish Communities in Romania

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Federation of the Jewish Communities in Romania
Federația Comunităților Evreiești din România - Cultul mozaic
PresidentSilviu Vexler[1]
Founded16 February 1936
Registered15 June 1995
IdeologyJewish minority interests
National affiliationNational Minorities Parliamentary Group
Chamber of Deputies
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Senate
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European Parliament
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Website
www.jewishfed.ro/index.php

The Federation of the Jewish Communities in Romania (Romanian: Federația Comunităților Evreiești din România - Cultul mozaic, FCER) is an cultural association in Romania representing the Jewish community. The FCER has right to one seat in the Chamber of Deputies.

History[edit]

The organisation was originally founded as the Federation of Unions of Jewish Communities in Romania (Romanian: Federaţiei Uniunilor de Comunităţi Evreiești din România, FUCER) in 1936 by the Unions of Communities of the Old Kingdom and of the Provinces (Romanian: Uniunile de Comunităţi din Vechiul Regat și din Provincii), which included the Union of Jewish Communities of the Old Kingdom, the Union of Jewish Communities of Transylvania and Banat, the Union of Jewish Communities of Bucovina, and the Union of Jewish Communities of Bessarabia. The first elected president of the organisation was Sigmund Birman, a philanthropist and industrialist. From 1941 to 1944 it was banned by the government of dictator Ion Antonescu, and replaced with the pro-government Jewish Centre of Romania (Romanian: Centrala Evreilor din România), before being re-established in 1945. It took on its current name in 1949.

The FCER contested the 1996 general elections, receiving 12,746 votes (0.1%) and winning a single seat in the Chamber of Deputies under the electoral law allowing organisations representing ethnic minority groups to be exempt from the electoral threshold only applied as long as they received 10% of the vote required for a single seat in the Chamber of Deputies.[2][3] The Jewish communities body has won a seat in every election since.

Electoral history[edit]

Election Chamber of Deputies Senate
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
1996 12,746 0.10 1
2000 12,629 0.11 1
2004 8,449 0.08 1
2008 22,393 0.33 1
2012 10,019 0.14 1
2016 5,069 0.07 1
2020 3,509 0.06 1

Leaders[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Despre noi
  2. ^ 1992 Parliamentary Elections: Chamber of Deputies Archived June 14, 2011, at the Wayback Machine University of Essex
  3. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1585 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7

External links[edit]