BUCHAREST, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) -- Moldovan Communists' leader Vladimir Voronin on Monday hailed businessman Chiril Gaburici's readiness to form a new government.
The attitude is generally seen by local analysts in Chisinau, Moldova's capital, that the Party of Communists will support the cabinet proposed by Gaburici in a confidence vote in parliament likely to be held on Thursday.
"We agreed we will be very constructive the day the government will ask for a vote of confidence from parliament," Voronin told a press conference after his meeting with Gaburici, stressing "we didn't impose conditions. We have only constructive proposals."
Gaburici said in his turn that they had a constructive discussion.
"We discussed with all the political and social partners and asked all of them to support us in the next step that we must take," the prime minister-designate said.
President Nicolae Timofti on Saturday appointed Gaburici as prime minister-designate, two days after the cabinet proposed by former Prime Minister Iurie Leanca failed to win the confidence vote in parliament.
Gaburici was put forward for premiership by the Liberal Democratic Party, the only one of the five parliamentary parties which fielded a candidate.
On January 23, the Liberal Democratic Party and the Democratic Party signed an agreement to form a minority coalition government, as they could not reach agreement after more than 50 days of negotiations with the Liberal Party on formation of a three-party majority cabinet.
Gaburici has been holding consultations in these days with the parliamentary political parties for securing their support in parliament.
His coalition government will get support from most of the 42 deputies of the Liberal Democrats and the Democrats in the 101-seat parliament, while the new cabinet needs 51 votes to pass the vote of confidence in the parliament.
The cabinet will easily pass the confident vote, if Gaburici will get the support of Communists, allotted 21 seats in the parliament after the general elections on Nov. 30, 2014.
Gaburici, 38, managed the mobile phone company "Moldcell" from 2008 to 2012 and then its daughter company in Azerbaijan.
Gaburici is the last chance of the country to avoid a snap election, as it is the second, and also the last attempt to invest the government, otherwise the parliament will be dissolved.