Ion Iliescu (born March 3, 1930, Oltenita, Romania) is a Romanian politician who twice served as president of Romania (1990–96; 2000–04).
Iliescu received a degree in business from the Polytechnic Institute of Bucharest and then studied engineering in Moscow. In 1953 he joined the Communist Party, and he held positions of increasing prestige during the following decade. A protégé of Nicolae Ceaușescu, he benefited from his mentor’s election as party general secretary in 1965. In 1971, however, he fell out of favour with Ceaușescu, who divested him of all positions except his membership on the Central Committee and launched him on a career of remote assignments, frequent transfers, and decreasing responsibilities. In 1984 Iliescu was expelled from the Central Committee.
Unrest with Ceaușescu’s dictatorial rule helped trigger a revolution in December 1989 that resulted in his overthrow and death. Iliescu played a major role in the uprising—which resulted in the deaths of more than 1,100 people—and on December 26 he became president of an interim government. He won the presidency in elections held on May 20, 1990, the first open voting in more than 50 years, and he was reelected, under a new constitution, on October 11, 1992. Serving in a government that included many former communists, he did not press for the economic and social reforms that were needed to lift the country out of its poverty and nationalistic feuds, and in elections held on November 17, 1996, he lost to a centrist candidate. Four years later, however, with the country continuing to suffer from economic problems and internal dissension, he won the presidency again, running as head of the Social Democratic Party (Partidul Social Democrat; PSD). During his second term, he was successful in gaining entry for Romania into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and he supported talks aimed at securing membership in the European Union (the country joined the EU in 2007). The PSD suffered heavy losses in the 2004 elections, and Iliescu stepped down as president. The following year he was voted out as party leader.
In 2018 Iliescu was charged with crimes against humanity, accused of failing to prevent numerous deaths during the 1989 revolution. Among the allegations were claims that Iliescu, in an attempt to maintain power, used the media to broadcast false reports that created panic and led to needless shootouts.