Tudor Chirilă says he respects Bolojan, although he criticizes his reforms: “Pays who works. Whoever is, collects”

Tudor Chirilă expressed his frustration for increasing taxes and lack of real reforms, talking about the inequities incurred by the Romanians who worked honestly.

Tudor Chirilă sent a sharp message to the Facebook Political Political Class

In a viral post, Tudor Chiril “The real culprits escape the fairy tale.”

“First of all, it seems incredible to me that the culprits of the budgetary dismantling who now indebly – mainly Marcel Ciolacu, Nicolae Ionel Ciucă, Marcel Boloș and Adrian Căciu – do not answer in any way. Their responsibility is zero, and now I start to bark that they have left the country.”says Chirila.

The artist also offers figures to support his charges:

“The Ciolacu Government has spent 60 billion euros from the reserve fund – twice as much as all governments from Romania’s entry to 2023. That is, in 15 years.”

In his opinion, the austerity measures are supported by the citizens, while the political and economic elites escape:

“When we talk about the austerity measures, we will swear more those who take them, not the ones who brought us into this situation. How does Ciolacu answer for the dissemination that brings us these fiscal measures? How?”

Chirilă criticizes the new fiscal changes, which they say are “Unfair” and “Made on the knees”:

“The fiscal changes have been approved and many of them are inequitable, unjust, especially if you look at the synecuristic mafia whispered at the state money. And they are done without a real budgetary impact study. The state needs money now, that otherwise Ciolacu, Ciucă and USL have to be on the verge of bankruptcy.”

One of the measures “Unfair” It targets it directly:

“The VAT on tickets increased from 9 to 21%, so the tickets on a ticket reached 46%. This while in Horeca, which is a sector with a turnover of 20 times higher than the show industry, it has increased only to 11%. So the principle is to take more from those smaller and less from those bigger?”

One of the toughest diagnostics made by Chirilă to the current fiscal system comes in the form of a bitter slogan:

“In 35 years, the state has perfected a slogan: the state charges, but does not collect. Who pays? Well, pays who works. Whoever hens.”

Chirilă says that Ilie Bolojan deserves respect for the courage to try administrative reforms, but warns that he is almost alone in a fight with a well-rooted system:

“I respect Bolojan for the role he assumed. I realize it is almost a political suicide. That is, the man is applying for the most detested in Romania. He probably has no way to get out of this.”

In a more technical note, Chirilă makes a comparison between Romania and France:

“A magistrate in France can retire at 64, in Romania at 48. The average pension in Romania is 5000 euros net in 2024, while in France it is 3000 euros net. Although France has double pensioners, the cost is the same due to the huge pensions in Romania.”

In the end, he also has a message for the Bolojan government.

“Mr. Ilie Bolojan and, above all, the Parliament of Romania – the only solution is to increase the retirement age at magistrates and reform the financing of special pensions. You cannot have a pension five times as an average salary.”