Tag: PAS

  • The Republic of Moldova after the local elections

    The Republic of Moldova after the local elections

    Over three decades, the Republic of Moldova, Romania’s neighbor to the east, has made a giant leap from being a vassal of Moscow in the Soviet era to being a candidate for EU accession. Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, against which the pro-European administration in Chişinău, led by President Maia Sandu, adopted a correct stand by denouncing it in harsh terms, gave a boost to the process of heading towards the West, where they can find a chance of democratic stability and prosperity. The resistance of the pro-Russian left is, however, obvious. Sunday’s local elections are proof thereof. Maia Sandu’s Action and Solidarity Party (PAS) won more than 40% of the votes cast for mayors, councilors and district councils, and village councils.



    The presidential party won mayoral seats in the first round of voting in more than a quarter of around 900 villages and towns. The victories were mostly in rural areas, and the candidates of the Action and Solidarity Party failed to win mayoral positions in the big cities. In Chişinău, the incumbent mayor, Ion Ceban, a former prominent member of the Socialist Party, was re-elected in the first round. However, his party did not obtain the same success in the Municipal Council. Analyst Ion Tăbârţă notices that the governing party has accumulated fewer votes than expected.



    Ion Tăbârţă: We understand that the positions of the socialists as a whole with those of the communists are quite solid. I somehow came up with certain optimistic forecasts according to which two-thirds of the society is pro-European, and one-third looks to the East. We see that it is not the case. The left-wing parties have more votes than the right-wing parties.



    Seen as a test for the pro-European policy of President Maia Sandu, the local elections took place against the background of accusations of Russian interference, denied, however, by Moscow. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said in a preliminary report that the entire campaign was distorted by an inflow of illicit, foreign funds and monetary incentives used to influence the will of voters.



    Reuters writes that before the vote, the Moldovan authorities accused Russia of buying votes by channeling 5 million dollars to what it called criminal groups led by fugitive businessman Ilan Şor, who was convicted in absentia for involvement in bank fraud in Moldova. Just two days before the vote, the authorities banned the Şor-linked Chance Party on security grounds, a decision that the OSCE believes limited voters’ options. This was the last national vote in the Republic of Moldova ahead of the presidential election that will take place in November 2024. A year later, in 2025, parliamentary elections are scheduled. (LS)

  • Un parlament pro-european în Republica Moldova

    Un parlament pro-european în Republica Moldova

    Alegerile legislative
    desfășurate în Republica Moldova pe 11 iulie au configurat în fostul stat
    sovietic majoritar românofon un parlament în acord cu orientarea pro-europeană
    a Maiei Sandu, câștigătoare, la finalul anului trecut, a mandatului de președinte
    al Republicii. Scrutinul anticipat a consfințit o victorie clară a Partidului
    Acţiune şi Solidaritate, fondat acum cinci ani de Maia Sandu, acesta
    obținând 63 din cele 101 mandate de deputat. 32 de mandate au revenit Blocului
    Comuniştilor şi Socialiştilor, condus de foștii șefi filoruși ai statului, comunistul
    Vladimir Voronin și socialistul Igor Dodon, iar restul de 6 mandate au fost
    obținute de Partidul Şor, al controversatului om de afaceri Ilan Şor.

    În discursul susţinut în noul
    parlament de la Chişinău, reunit luni, Maia Sandu a declarat toleranţă zero
    faţă de corupţie şi le-a atras atenţia deputaţilor că ordinea trebuie să
    înceapă din legislativ

    Republica
    Moldova împlineşte în curând 30 de ani. După atâtea eşecuri, măcar acum, la 30
    de ani, să construim un stat pentru oameni, pentru toţi oamenii, nu pentru
    găşti care s-au folosit de încrederea cetăţenilor ca să-şi adune averi
    nemeritate şi să-şi subordoneze statul propriilor interese.

    Într-un stat
    zguduit, mulţi ani, de cazuri de corupţie la vârful puterii, cazuri rămase în
    mare parte nerezolvate, noul legislativ are acum sarcina dificilă de a pune
    bazele reformei în justiţie şi de a accelera investigarea fraudelor majore. Este
    timpul unei adevărate revoluţii în felul în care este guvernată ţara. Vrem să
    vedem un Parlament în care să se respecte procedurile. Legile trebuie propuse
    pentru consultare publică, oamenii încurajaţi să-şi expună opinia, iar experţii
    chemaţi să contribuie
    , a apreciat șefa statului. În ceea ce priveşte viitorul guvern, Maia Sandu a
    spus că aşteaptă de la acesta un nou model de dezvoltare economică: Ca să
    ieşim din sărăcie şi să asigurăm bunăstare pentru toţi trebuie să dezvoltăm
    economia. […] Avem o oportunitate istorică de a alinia politica la interesele
    cetăţeanului. Ţine de fiecare dintre noi. Ţara noastră e aşa cum o facem noi.
    Vom culege ceea ce semănăm.

    Ce şanse are Maia Sandu să
    reuşească să transforme Republica Moldova într-un stat pentru oameni, cu
    cetăţenii în centrul proiectelor şi să facă şi ordine în instituţiile publice? Ar
    fi prima dată când se întâmplă asta în afară UE, adică un fel de europenizare
    fără integrare, a comentat la Radio România profesorul universitar Dan
    Dungaciu. Din
    această perspectivă, oricât de optimiste ar putea părea premisele, suntem
    totuşi în faţa unui experiment. Şi din punctul acesta de vedere trebuie să ne
    păstrăm realismul, spune Dan Dungaciu. Dar, a adăugat el, din perspectiva evoluţiilor,
    situaţia pare pozitivă, niciodată nu a existat o verticală a puterii atât de
    solidă, completă, de partea pro-europenilor.


  • Programma Radio Romania Internazionale 12.07.2021

    Programma Radio Romania Internazionale 12.07.2021

    Giornale radio: Stato di allerta per Covid-19 prorogato in Romania; Elezioni Moldova, le autorità di Bucarest salutano vittoria filo-europeo PAS (segue approfondimento); Italia campione dEuropa; Ospiti a RRI: Ordine delle Arti e delle Lettere al critico cinematografico Irina Margareta Nistor; “Chiacchiere dei colori”, il giovane artista italo-romeno Andrei Pennazio, in mostra al Museo Nazionale della Marina Romena di Costanza; Pagina di storia (replica); Una canzone al giorno



  • Pro-European majority in the Moldovan Parliament

    Pro-European majority in the Moldovan Parliament

    The pro-Western presidential Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) has won the early parliamentary elections held on Sunday in the Republic of Moldova. After the counting of votes from almost all polling stations, the Party of Action and Solidarity PAS, founded by the Moldovan President, Maia Sandu, obtained more than half of the votes. The Electoral Bloc of Communists and Socialists (BECS), headed by former pro-Russian heads of state, communist Vladimir Voronin and socialist Igor Dodon, comes second, with about a quarter of the votes cast.



    A new entry in the Moldovan Parliament is the populist party of the fugitive oligarch Ilan Șor, the protagonist of several big corruption cases, who already received a 6-year prison sentence from a court of first instance. None of the other around 20 lists of candidates has crossed the electoral threshold. The two parties that are openly promoting Moldova’s reunification with Romania, the Party of National Unity (PUN) and the Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR), a franchise of the nationalist party of the same name, in opposition, in the Romanian Parliament, have obtained very low scores, below 1%.



    Analysts say that, according to a latest poll, the rate of unionists in Moldova is still over 40%, but they have also voted for the presidential party. President Maia Sandu announced on April 28 that she had signed the decree for the dissolution of Parliament, dominated by the pro-Russian left and unable to appoint a government, and had called for snap legislative elections to be held on July 11.



    According to commentators, President Maia Sandu wanted to go through all the constitutional procedures in order to be able to more rapidly dissolve the former parliament, considered the most corrupt parliament in the independent Republic of Moldova’s 30-year history. Elected president in the autumn of 2020 with a pro-European Union program, Maia Sandu has repeatedly accused the former MPs of wanting to sabotage her authority and has called for early legislative elections, for Parliament to be able to help her in the fight against corruption and the coronavirus pandemic.



    After the unprecedented score obtained in the elections by her party, a self styled right-wing party, a partner of the National Liberal Party – PNL (in the government coalition in Romania) and of the European People’s Party, the Moldovan President Maia Sandu will finally have all the levers of power. She has excellent relations with the Romanian authorities from which the Republic of Moldova has received half a million anti-COVID-19 vaccines in addition to medical equipment, and she also has open doors in Brussels, Paris and Berlin. Still, Maia Sandu remains the president of one of the poorest states in Europe, riddled with corruption and undermined by the pro-Russian separatism in Transdniester (east), therefore Sundays victory is a big challenge for her, and her term in office is going to be difficult. (LS)