Exclusively available inside The International Herald Tribune in Greece and Cyprus  
  Wednesday June 10, 2009 - Archive
Current Edition | Athens Stock Exchange | Useful Information | Greek Edition | Site Search  
  Search
Home page
ENGLISH EDITION
Date
10/06/2009  
Frontpage
News
Commentaries
S/E Europe
Features
Business. & Fin.
Arts & Leisure
Sports
Weather
Classifieds
Cartoon Archive
  RSS
INFORMATION
Company Profile
Health & Emergency
S/E EUROPE
Romania’s Elena Basescu ready to take on Strasbourg
Former model and daughter of president now elected as Euro deputy


AP

Elena Basescu, the daughter of Romanian President Traian Basescu, is pictured leaving the polling center after casting her vote in the European Parliament elections in Bucharest on Sunday.

BUCHAREST (AFP) – The daughter of Romania’s president is a jet-set queen and an ex-model better known for her blunders and mishaps but she vowed late on Monday not to disappoint now that she has been elected a Euro deputy.

“The media portrayed me as an uneducated woman but I showed during this campaign that I was worth more than that,” Elena Basescu, the 29-year-old daughter of Romanian President Traian Basescu, told RFI radio.

Basescu, who ran as an independent, is bound for Strasbourg after winning 4.22 percent of votes in the European parliamentary elections, held on Sunday in Romania.

Born on April 24, 1980, in Constanta, a resort town on the Black Sea coast, Romania’s first daughter took to the catwalk in her youth to show off her slender figure and brunette Barbie-doll look.

Late nights clubbing in Bucharest and a turbulent love life ensured she soon became a firm favorite of the Romanian tabloids, earning her the dubious honor of being nicknamed the “Carpathian Paris Hilton.” But she took a major change of course and forced doubters to take her more seriously in 2007 when she entered politics and was elected secretary-general of the youth wing of her father’s Liberal Democrat party.

Her election, however, provoked grumblings within the party and her presence on its list for the European parliamentary elections also drew accusations of nepotism, leading her in March to announce her candidacy as an independent.

To those who belittled her qualifications, she showed off her degrees in economics and an internship at the European Parliament, adding: “I have chosen to go to Strasbourg on foot, while candidates from the other parties are taking the plane.”

Basescu traveled across the country targeting the youth vote in a widely publicized campaign but media reports talked little of her program, which focused particularly on protecting children whose parents work abroad.

She was forced to reverse her earlier position in favor of legalizing marijuana following a public outcry but this did not stop her path to Strasbourg.

After gathering some 200,000 votes on Sunday, Basescu announced: “I am very proud of what I have achieved but it is now time I rejoined the party in which I grew up.”

The Liberal Democrats welcomed her with open arms and Basescu has set herself a new goal: a job in the European Parliament’s important budget and finance committee.

Print article | e-mail


[ Front Page ] [ News ] [ Commentaries ] [ S/E Europe ]
[ Features ] [ Business & Finance ] [ Arts & Leisure ] [ Sports ]
[ Subscriptions ] [ Editor ] [ Webmaster ]
Company Profile | Health & Emergency

S/E Europe
Romania’s Elena Basescu ready to take on Strasbourg
War crimes trial in absentia
ECHR raps Turkey
Protests over EU customs controls on Kosovo-Serb border
‘Mladic moved freely,’ says former bodyguard
Bosnian-Serb leader hits out over policeman’s sacking
Balkan Briefs

English Edition - Greece's International English Language Newspaper
Exclusively available inside The International Herald Tribune in Greece and Cyprus
© 2009 H KAΘHMEPINH All rights reserved.