Tag: Socialist Party

  • Elections in the Republic of Moldova

    Elections in the Republic of Moldova

    The most consistent and energetic supporter of the
    sovereignty, territorial integrity and European aspirations of the neighbouring
    country, Romania received with caution the results of Sunday’s legislative
    elections in the Republic of Moldova. The Romanian Foreign Ministry says the
    ballot unfolded in keeping with the legal provisions and democratic standards. According
    to the Romanian Foreign Ministry it is very important now for Moldova to go
    through the post-election stages responsibly, observing democratic principles,
    which are instrumental in ensuring stability and keeping the country’s European
    perspective open.

    Solely the European option may bring sustainable responses to
    the Moldovan citizens’ legitimate prosperity expectations, the Romanian
    diplomacy underlines. In exchange, the
    right-of-centre opposition in Bucharest makes a much more severe assessment of
    the situation. The National Liberal MP Matei Dobrovie says the elections
    haven’t been free, neither fair, nor democratic. He condemns the fact that
    Moldovan voters living abroad haven’t been allowed to vote only by presenting
    the Moldovan identity card, which happened in the previous elections, and he levels
    the accusation that tens of thousands of people in the pro-Russian break-away
    region of Transdniester, which got out from under Chishinau’s control in 1992, have
    reportedly been bribed to come to the polling stations on the right side of the
    Dniester, in an organised move.

    The pro-European opposition in Chisinau also
    deems the elections as the most undemocratic in the history of the small
    republic. Beyond disputes, figures are telling. Just like opinion polls to
    gauge voting intentions clearly indicated, the winners are the pro-Russian Socialists
    of President Igor Dodon. They have won 35 of the 101 MP seats. The senior party
    in the self-declared pro-western government, the Democratic Party, of
    centre-left orientation, led by the controversial oligarch Vladimir Plahotniuc,
    has got 30 seats and the ACUM bloc, an electoral cartel of the pro-European
    right wing got some 26 seats. Seven seats go to the populist party led by the
    pro-Russian mayor of the town of Orhei, in the centre, Ilan Şor, who was
    sentenced to 7 years and 6 months in a money scandal lawsuit, after 1 billion
    dollars disappeared from the Moldovan banking system.

    Three independent
    candidates will also become MPs. The former single party in the Soviet era, the
    communist party, will no longer be represented in parliament for the first
    time, just like the parties which have explicitly assumed the ideal of
    reunification with Romania after independence was declared, namely the Christian
    Democrats and then the Liberals. President Dodon has warned that he will call for
    holding early elections if no clear winner emerges from the ballot, and the
    parties fail to make up a government coalition. Unanimously considered a key
    figure and even the iron fist of the political class in Chisinau, Plahotniuc has
    expressed readiness to negotiate with anyone and to make abstraction from
    ideological differences. Pundits tend to believe he will have again the ability
    to form a majority, rallying around his Democratic Party, if not parties, at
    least MPs always willing to abandon the sign under which they have been
    elected.