From the BBC:
“Moldova
election: Pro-EU candidate Maia Sandu wins presidency”
Opposition
candidate Maia Sandu has won Moldova's presidential election after a run-off
vote against the incumbent Igor Dodon, preliminary results show. With almost
all the ballots counted, Ms Sandu has won 57.7% of the vote compared to Mr
Dodon's 42.2%. Ms Sandu, 48, is a former World Bank economist who favours
closer ties with the European Union. Mr Dodon, meanwhile, is openly backed by
Russia. Final results are expected to be announced within five days. According
to preliminary results, Maia Sandu has scored an emphatic victory. Moldova's
former prime minister said that as president she would make it her priority to
tackle corruption and unite the country.
She faces huge
challenges, not least dealing with the coronavirus pandemic and the economy.
Moldova is one of the poorest countries in Europe. But this was also a vote on
whether Moldova should look east or west. Maia Sandu favours closer ties with
Europe. The defeat of the incumbent, Igor Dodon, is embarrassing for the Kremlin:
President Vladimir Putin had openly backed him in this race. Still, Moldova is
a parliamentary republic. Presidents here struggle to get things done without a
parliamentary majority, and that's something Ms Sandu doesn't have. Late on
Sunday, there were celebrations outside the opposition headquarters in the
capital Chisinau where supporters chanted "President Maia Sandu!". The
former prime minister won the first round of voting two weeks ago thanks to a
late surge in support from Moldovans living abroad, but failed to secure enough
votes for an outright victory. As of Sunday evening, more than 1.6 million
people - almost 53% of the population with the right to vote - were confirmed
to have taken part in the run-off ballot, data on the Central Election
Commission website (in Romanian and Russian) shows. Voters had been able to
cast their ballots in more than 2,000 polling stations, including those
available for Moldovans living abroad, the central election commission said. After
casting her vote in the capital, Chisinau, on Sunday, Ms Sandu called for
"maximum vigilance" against possible fraud. She has pledged to fight
corruption in the former Soviet republic. Meanwhile, Mr Dodon said he had voted
"for friendship with the European Union, and the Russian Federation, and
Romania, and Ukraine - for balanced foreign policy".
^ Hopefully
Russia doesn’t see this as a threat and invade and occupy (they are already on
Moldovan territory in the Transnistria and have been there for 30 years.) Moldova
should be able to balance life between Russia, the EU and the West. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-54942847
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