Among the professional activities are to be mentioned:
Between April 2009 and October 2009 he held the position of Director General of the Payments and Intervention Agency for Agriculture;
Between 2007 and 2009 he was an independent evaluator of the World Bank in the MAKIS project;
Between 2003 and 2006 he held the position of Coordinator of the Body of European Integration Advisers within the Ministry of Agriculture, Forests and Rural Development;
Between 1999 and 2003 he held several positions representing the Students of the University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Bucharest, among which are:
Between 2000 and 2002 he was the president of the League of Students from the University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Bucharest;
Between 2001 and 2002 he was a member of the National Council of Students under the Ministry of Education and Research.
Political career
President of the PC
In 2006, Daniel Constantin joined the Conservative Party (PC), where he coordinated the work of the European Funds Department. In 2010, following an extraordinary congress of the party, he was elected president of the PC, with the support of the party's founder, Dan Voiculescu. At the age of 32, Daniel Constantin became the youngest party president in Romania. He stayed in that office until the dissolution of PC in 2015.
Minister of Agriculture
In 2012, Daniel Constantin was appointed the Minister of Agriculture in the Victor Pontacabinet.[1] The agriculture portfolio and the appointment of Constantin to this post were announced by the Prime Minister Ponta before the presentation of the composition of the government, which showed that his position was established before the negotiations of the other portfolios.
Daniel Constantin has a personal debt of almost 300,000 euros to Dan Voiculescu. The Ministry of Agriculture, under the leadership of Daniel Constantin, is in dispute with the Grivco group, controlled by Voiculescu, accusing him of a damage of 60 million euros, following the fraudulent privatization of the Food Research Institute (ICA). Voiculescu was sued in December 2008, in the case regarding the privatization of ICA, a state-owned company acquired by Voiculescu from the state after it was undervalued by over 60 million euros. Thus, Constantine is suspected of having been appointed minister only to remove them.[2] Subsequently, by virtue of this debt, the National Agency for Fiscal Administration won in 2018 a lawsuit against Daniel Constantin in which the state must recover part of the damage from the ICA file from the payment of that debt.[3]
On 9 December 2012, he won the became MP from Argeș County.
In May 2017, Daniel Constantin and former education minister Sorin Cîmpeanu left ALDE after a conflict with co-chair Popescu-Tăriceanu. Together with former Prime Ministers Victor Ponta who had been expelled from PSD, they founded the social-liberal Pro Romania Party (PRO).[4] The new party was led by Daniel Constantin as interim chairman, until Ponta took that position at the first party congress in October 2018. In November 2019, Constantin and six other PRO deputies voted, against Ponta's order, for the new government of Ludovic Orban of the National Liberal Party (PNL). In early 2020, Constantin alongside Cîmpeanu and three other former PRO lawmakers joined the PNL.[5]