Romanians vote in parliamentary election amid turmoil over claims of Russian interference in presidential race

Vocabulary: 431, Words: 930

1Romanians cast ballots Sunday in a parliamentary election sandwiched between a two-round presidential race, the first of which has plunged the European Union and NATO member into unprecedented turmoil following allegations of electoral violations and Russian interference.

2Sunday’s vote will elect a new government and prime minister and determine the formation of the 466-seat legislature. 3Romanians living abroad have been able to vote since Saturday. 4By 5 p.m., about 7.5 million peopleabout 42% of eligible votershad cast ballots, according to the Central Election Bureau.

5The legislative vote comes a week after the first round of a presidential race that saw a controversial far-right populist who was polling in single digits win the most votes. 6Calin Georgescu, 62, is due to face reformist Elena Lasconi of the Save Romania Union party, or USR, in a Dec. 8 runoff.

7Georgescu’s success, which many have attributed to his rapid rise in popularity on the social media platform TikTok, has triggered nightly protests throughout Romania by those who oppose his past remarks praising Romanian fascist leaders and Russian President Vladimir Putin and view him as a threat to democracy.

8Many observers believe the presidential outcome indicates a sharp shift from Romania’s mainstream parties to more populist anti-establishment parties, whose voices have found fertile ground amid high inflation, high cost of living and a sluggish economy.

9Alexandru Rizescu, a 24-year-old medical student, says he was surprised by the result in the first-round presidential ballot and that it’s anobvious signEurope at large is shifting toward far-right populism.

10Most of us are sick of these big parties, but now we have to think about thelesser evil,” he said. 11If Georgescu becomes president, with a favorable parliament, it’s going to be wild.”

Romanian presidential candidate Calin Georgescu gives a statement to media in the village of Izvorani, on the outskirts of Bucharest, on November 26.

12According to a report by Expert Forum, a Bucharest-based think tank, Georgescu’s TikTok account before last week’s vote saw an explosion of engagement, which it said appearedsudden and artificial, similar to his polling results.”

13Without naming Georgescu, who declared zero campaign spending, Romania’s top defense body said Thursday thata presidential candidate benefited from massive exposure due to preferential treatmentgranted by TikTok. 14Romania has become apriority target for hostile actionsby Russia, it added. 15The Kremlin denies it is meddling.

16The same day, the Constitutional Court requested a recount of all 9.4 million votes after a presidential candidate who obtained 1% filed a complaint alleging the USR had violated electoral laws against campaign activities on polling day. 17The Central Election Bureau approved the request and said scanned reports were due to be sent in by Sunday night. 18On Friday, the court postponed a decision until Monday on whether to annul the vote.

19Cristian Andrei, a political consultant based in Bucharest, predicted the general election could also be reshaped by Georgescu’s success, with far-right parties possibly obtaining record highs.

20The impact of the surprise in last Sunday’s presidential election will be significant, and we are going to wake up in a new political reality,” he told The Associated Press. 21Georgescu voters will speak again and will reshape how we look at the political Romanian spectrum from now on and probably forever.”

22The most probable scenario will be a difficult-to-build majority in the parliament to support and endorse a new government,” he added.

23Despite historically being Romania’s two main opposition parties that have dominated post-communist politics, the Social Democratic Party, PSD, and the National Liberal Party, PNL, formed an unlikely coalition in 2021, which has become increasingly strained. 24A small ethnic Hungarian party exited the Cabinet last year after a power-sharing dispute.

25After casting his ballot on Sunday, incumbent Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu told the media that Romanianshave to choose between stability and chaos.”

26Today is a very important day for all of us Romanians to stay on our European and North Atlantic path,” he said. 27This is the most important choice we have to make today.”

28Georgescu told the media Sunday that he votedso the good prevails over evil.”

29I voted for peace, not for war, for respect, for total political responsibility, dedicated totally to Romanian people,” he said. 30I voted for Romania, along with Romania, forever for Romania.”

31While the presidential role in Romania has significant decision-making powers in areas such as national security and foreign policy, the prime minister is the head of the nation’s government.

Romanian presidential candidate Elena Lasconi holds Romania's flag at the end of a meeting with supporters in Bucharest, Romania, on November 25 after making it to the runoff.

32Recent surveys have suggested the top three parties in Sunday’s race will be the PSD, the far-right Alliance for the Unity of Romanians and the PNL. 33After rising to the political scene eight years ago on an anti-corruption ticket, the USR’s popularity has diminished in recent years, but could garner the next most votes.

34More minor parties that may not pass the 5% threshold to enter parliament include the pro-EU reformist REPER party and the liberal-conservative Force of the Right. 35Some have predicted that the far-right nationalist S.O.S Romania party, and the little-known Party of Young People, which has backed Georgescu, could pass the threshold.

36Sens, a progressive grassroots party founded last year that advocates for improvements in sustainability and transparency, could also garner enough votes to enter parliament.

37Silviu Safta, a 30-year-old retail manager in Bucharest, said that Georgescu topping the polls wasa surprise for everyone, except for the 2 million people that voted for him,” and that he’s skeptical whether Sunday’s parliamentary vote will follow the same populist tilt.

38I think Romanians will be more informed about their elections andtheir candidates,” he said. 39I’m a little bit skeptical about the results, but I hope that democracy will win.”

from CNN