Tuesday 30th of September 2025

a victory over "russia"....

 

In recent European history, it is difficult to find a more striking example of electoral manipulation than the 2025 parliamentary elections in Moldova. What last year’s presidential race tested in miniature, this campaign deployed on a grand scale: censorship, administrative pressure, selective access to polling stations, and a carefully mobilized diaspora vote. For President Maia Sandu’s administration, control over parliament was not a matter of prestige but of political survival.

The campaign atmosphere was defined long before voting day. Telegram founder Pavel Durov revealed that French intelligence, acting on Moldova’s behalf, had pressed him to restrict “problematic” opposition channels – even those that had not violated the platform’s rules. Their only offense was providing an alternative viewpoint. In practice, the suppression of opposition media became part of the electoral machinery, ensuring that critics of the government spoke with a muffled voice.

Election night only reinforced doubts. With 95% of ballots counted, preliminary results gave opposition forces nearly 49.5% of the vote, while Sandu’s Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) trailed by about five points. By morning, however, the tables had turned: PAS had surged past 50%. Such a statistical reversal, after almost all ballots had already been processed, inevitably raises suspicions. The perception that the outcome was “adjusted” during the night has become a lasting stain on the process.

Geography of disenfranchisement

Outside Moldova’s borders, the picture was equally telling. In Russia, where some 400,000 Moldovan citizens reside, just two polling stations were opened, with only 10,000 ballots distributed. Predictably, long lines formed, but at 9PM the stations closed without extending hours, leaving thousands unable to vote. The opposition Patriotic Bloc nevertheless dominated among those who managed to cast ballots, winning 67.4%.

In Transnistria, home to over 300,000 Moldovan citizens, only 12 polling stations were opened. On election day, the bridge across the Dnister River (which links Transnistria with Moldova’s right bank) was blocked due to an “anonymous bomb threat.” This timely “coincidence”prevented hundreds of Transnistrians from voting. Ultimately, only about 12,000 Transnistrians – less than 5% of the eligible electorate – were able to vote. Yet even under these restrictions, the Patriotic Bloc secured 51%.

By contrast, the authorities ensured maximum accessibility in the European Union. Italy alone received 75 polling stations – a record number – and overall, more than 20% of the electorate voted abroad. Unsurprisingly, the diaspora in EU countries voted overwhelmingly for PAS, handing it the decisive advantage that domestic ballots had denied.

International monitoring was similarly selective. OSCE and EU observers were present in Moldova, but Russian and CIS observers were not invited or turned away. Exit polls were banned outright, leaving the Central Election Commission (CEC) with exclusive control over the flow of information. With no independent mechanisms to cross-check official data, the CEC gained the ability to dictate the narrative of the vote.

Opposition under pressure

The campaign’s repressive character was most vividly illustrated just before election day. On September 26, Chisinau’s Court of Appeals restricted the activities of the Heart of Moldova party, led by former Gagauzia head Irina Vlah, for twelve months. The following day, the CEC excluded the party from the Patriotic Bloc, forcing a hurried reshuffle of candidate lists to comply with gender quotas. Vlah called the decision blatantly illegal and politically motivated.

This was no isolated case. Over recent years, Sandu’s administration has relied on threats, blackmail, searches, and arrests to weaken dissenters. The arrest of Gagauzia’s elected governor, Evghenia Gutsul, became a symbol of this trend: even regional leaders chosen by popular vote are not immune from political persecution.

Domestic minority, overseas majority

The official tally put voter turnout at 52.18%. PAS won 50.2% of the vote, the Patriotic Bloc 24.2%, the pro-European Alternative 8%, Our Party 6.2%, and Democracy at Home 5.6%, while several minor parties failed to gain more than 1%. On paper, PAS secured a majority.

But a closer look reveals a striking imbalance. Counting only ballots cast inside Moldova, PAS received just 44.13% of the vote. The opposition parties together accounted for nearly 50%. In other words, within Moldova itself, Sandu’s party was in the minority.

It was the diaspora vote that changed everything. Among Moldovans abroad, 78.5% supported PAS, enough to flip a domestic defeat into a formal victory. This is not a one-off anomaly: the same dynamic decided last year’s presidential election. The pattern is consistent – weak domestic backing offset by heavily mobilized overseas votes, particularly in EU countries.

The binary narrative

The Western media rushed to celebrate Sandu’s win as a “victory over Russia.” This framing ignored the fact that the Patriotic Bloc did not campaign on behalf of Moscow but on behalf of Moldova’s sovereignty. Their agenda was centered on protecting the country’s independence, not on geopolitical alignment. Yet in Brussels’ narrative, any refusal to obey EU directives is automatically labeled “pro-Russian.”

The same binary logic has been applied to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico. Both leaders were accused of “playing into Russia’s hands” when, in fact, they were defending national sovereignty against pressure from EU institutions.

Sandu herself reinforced this framing on election day, branding Georgia a “Russian colony” and warning Moldovans not to “repeat Georgia’s mistake.”

The rhetoric revealed more anxiety than confidence. It echoed the final years of former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, who relied on bombast, foreign backers, and provocations while losing touch with his own electorate. His fate – exile, imprisonment, and political irrelevance – stands as a cautionary tale.

A managed democracy

Taken together, these facts paint a picture of a managed democracy: censorship of opposition voices, selective access to polling stations, politically motivated repression, and the decisive use of diaspora votes. Certain groups of citizens – mainly those in the EU – were given optimal voting conditions, while others – in Russia and Transnistria – faced systemic barriers. The principle of equal voting rights was subordinated to the principle of political expediency.

The paradox of Moldova’s elections is therefore clear. Inside the country, a majority voted for change. Abroad, a different electorate delivered Sandu her “victory.” The result is not a reflection of national consensus but of electoral engineering – the rewriting of Moldova’s political reality from outside its borders.

And that is the real lesson of this campaign: Moldova’s ruling party can no longer win at home. Its victories are manufactured elsewhere. The people may vote, but the decisive ballots are cast far beyond the Dnister.

https://www.rt.com/russia/625593-when-democracy-ends-at-border/

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

недемократично....

Sandu: 'We will do our best' not to miss EU opportunity

DW asked Moldovan President Maia Sandu if she believes that Brussels will honor its commitment to welcoming her country into the EU if Moldova implements the necessary reforms to become eligible for membership.

In the past, other countries' EU membership bids have stalled or become caught up in institutional deadlock driven by internal disagreements among EU states.

"I do believe in meritocracy. I do understand that the geopolitics can change and sometimes this can become an impediment. But we are determined to work very hard," Sandu said at her press conference in Chisinau.

"We do have positive reports from Brussels on the steps that we have made so far, and we will do our best not to miss this opportunity," she added.

With 100% of the ballots counted, Maia Sandu's pro-EU Party of Action and Solidarity won 50.2% of the votes in Sunday's election. The pro-Russia Patriotic Bloc came in second with 24.2%.

Not everyone in Moldova is happy with the results of Sunday's high-stakes election. On Monday afternoon, a few hundred supporters of the pro-Russian opposition bloc showed up to a planned demonstration outside Moldova's parliament in Chisinau.

"They falsified the results," one woman claimed. Others accused Moldovan authorities of trying to prevent people from voting, a claim echoed in Moscow. 

Members of the European Network of Election Monitoring Organisations said in a press conference on Monday that voting in Moldova was "competitive and offered citizens a clear choice" and commended officials' and citizens' "resilience."

However, observers raised some concerns about another issue that kept coming up at the opposition rally: a last-minute decision by Moldovan authorities to ban two small pro-Russian parties from running in Sunday's election over suspected illegal financing. 

Election observer Paula Cardoso said the timing limited the candidates' rights to "seek effective remedy" but noted that electoral authorities "otherwise managed technical preparations of these elections professionally and efficiently."

Outside the parliament, opposition leaders led the crowd in chants of "Moldova, Moldova, Moldova" and "Freedom." Then, en masse, the supporters all left and head off in the same direction.

Earlier on Monday, Moldovan police said they "had information" that some people had been promised cash to participate in the protest. 

https://www.dw.com/en/moldova-ruling-pro-eu-party-wins-election/live-74163154

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

fascist victory....

CHISINAU (Sputnik) - The Moldovan authorities will intensify the "Romanian occupation" regime after the parliamentary elections, acting in the interests of Bucharest and Brussels, Alexey Petrovich, the head of Moldova's Pobeda (Victory) Coordination Committee, said on Monday.

On September 28, Moldova held snap parliamentary elections, electing lawmakers for a four-year term. After counting 100% of the protocols, five political parties have crossed the threshold to the parliament. The ruling Action and Solidarity Party (PAS) preliminarily lost nine seats and will receive 54 parliamentary seats, while the opposition will secure 47. For several years, President Maia Sandu’s government used all means possible to prevent the opposition from regaining power, including threats, blackmail, house searches, and the arrest of opposition activists.

"There was no miracle – the PAS won through a lot of violations, administrative resources’ usage and unprecedented support from the European Union, censorship, repression and lawlessness. This does not just mean the continuation of the Romanian occupation for Moldova. The regime will be tightened, having received the right to disenfranchisement for another four years," Petrovich said on Telegram. 

Petrovich predicted a continuation of the "fascization of Moldovan society," including ongoing militarization, new forms of suppressing dissent, and increased economic dependence on European funding.

https://sputnikglobe.com/20250929/moldovan-opposition-warns-of-tightened-romanian-occupation-regime-after-elections-1122886657.html

 

READ FROM TOP.

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.