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Romanian hard-right candidate Simion secures decisive win in 1st round of presidential redo

Presidential candidate George Simion exits a voting booth
Romanian presidential candidate George Simion exits a voting booth during the first round of the election redo in Bucharest on Sunday.
(Vadim Ghirda / Associated Press)

Hard-right nationalist George Simion secured a decisive win Sunday in the first round of Romania’s presidential election redo, nearly complete electoral data showed.

The election took place months after an annulled vote plunged the European Union and NATO member country into its worst political crisis in decades.

Simion, the 38-year-old leader of the Alliance for the Unity of Romanians, or AUR, was far outpacing all other candidates in the polls with 40.5% of the tally, official electoral data showed, after 99% of ballots were counted from Sunday’s vote.

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Far behind in second place was Bucharest Mayor Nicusor Dan with 20.67%, and in third place was the governing coalition’s joint candidate, Crin Antonescu, with 20.62%. He conceded defeat after midnight, saying he believes it’s an “irreversible result.”

Eleven candidates vied for the presidency, and a runoff will be held May 18 between the top two candidates. By the time polls closed, about 9.57 million people — 53.2% of eligible voters — had cast their ballots, according to the Central Election Bureau, with 973,000 votes cast at polling stations set up in other countries.

Election redo held after vote annulled

The rerun was held after Romania’s political landscape was shaken last year when a top court voided the previous election in which far-right outsider Calin Georgescu topped the first round, following allegations of electoral violations and Russian interference, which Moscow has denied.

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In a prerecorded speech aired after polls closed, Simion said that despite many obstacles, Romanians “have risen up” and “we are approaching an exceptional result.”

“I am here to restore constitutional order,” said Simion, who came in fourth in last year’s race and later backed Georgescu. “I want democracy, I want normalcy, and I have a single objective: to give back to the Romanian people what was taken from them and to place at the center of decision-making the ordinary, honest, dignified people.”

As in many EU countries, anti-establishment sentiment is running high in Romania, fueled by high inflation and cost of living, a large budget deficit and a sluggish economy. Observers say the malaise has bolstered support for nationalist and far-right figures such as Georgescu, who is under investigation and was barred from the election rerun.

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Georgescu, who appeared Sunday alongside Simion at a polling station in the capital, Bucharest, called the vote redo “a fraud orchestrated by those who have made deceit the only state policy,” but said he was there to “acknowledge the power of democracy, the power of the vote that frightens the system, that terrifies the system.”

The presidential role carries a five-year term and significant decision-making powers in national security and foreign policy.

Widespread distrust in the authorities

Dan, a 55-year-old mathematician and former anti-corruption activist who founded the Save Romania Union party, or USR, in 2016, ran on a pro-EU “Honest Romania” ticket.

“It is about the trust of Romanians and our partners in democracy ... and in my opinion, it is a new beginning that we all have a responsibility to do correctly,” Dan said after the polls closed.

Antonescu, 65, a veteran centrist who campaigned on retaining Romania’s pro-Western orientation, said Sunday that he voted for “a united Romania, for a strong Romania, for a dignified Romania.”

“Democracy means a battle, sometimes taken to the maximum, but it is a battle of ideas,” he said after voting had closed. “Let’s not forget that we are fellow citizens, sons of the same country, and we must move forward together.”

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Victor Ponta, who was prime minister from 2012 to 2015, also pushed a “Romania First” campaign and boasted of having close ties to President Trump’s administration, stands in fourth place with 14.3% of the vote.

Elena Lasconi, who came second in last year’s first-round ballot and participated in the rerun, garnered about 2.6% of the vote. She positioned herself as a staunchly pro-Western, anti-system candidate, railing against what she described as a corrupt political class.

Cristian Andrei, a Bucharest-based political consultant, said that Simion’s clear victory indicates a complete “reshape” of the political spectrum, and that if Dan reaches the runoff, “it will be a clear signal that the political class and the political establishment have lost.”

“You have a populist or pro-sovereign movement ... and you also have this liberal, urban, pro-Western segment of Romania that wants change,” he said, adding that it would be a “huge rejection of the classic political parties ... and this will mean that the entire political spectrum will be reshaped.”

Crossroads moment for Romania

Distrust in the authorities remains widespread, especially for those who voted for Georgescu, a sizable electorate that Simion has sought to tap into.

“The anti-establishment sentiment is not like an anarchic movement, but is against the people who destroyed this country,” Simion told the Associated Press days before Sunday’s vote. “We are not a democratic state anymore.”

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Simion said that AUR is “perfectly aligned with the MAGA movement,” capitalizing on a growing wave of populism in Europe after Trump’s political comeback in the U.S. AUR, which has doubled its support since it rose to prominence in a 2020 parliamentary election, proclaims to stand for “family, nation, faith, and freedom.”

Rares Ghiorghies, 36, who works in the energy sector and voted for Simion, says he hopes that if he secures the presidency, Romania can “return to the basic principles of democracy, regain our confidence.”

“What happened in December 2024 is definitely a dark chapter in the history of this country, and we can no longer accept it,” he said of the canceled election. “I’m hoping things will get back to normal.”

The election redo is a crossroads moment for Romania as it seeks to shore up its geopolitical alliances, which have become strained amid the election crisis.

The decision to annul the election and the ban on Georgescu’s candidacy drew criticism from U.S. Vice President JD Vance, Elon Musk and Russia, which supported his candidacy in the rerun.

McGrath writes for the Associated Press.

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