In last years dramatic election Maia Sandu secured her second term as Moldovas president with 54.35% of votes defeating Alexandr Stoianoglo (who got strong support from pro-Russian socialists)
The election showed interesting split: inside Moldova Stoianoglo got 51.2% while overseas voters gave Sandu more than 80% support; making them key players in final outcome. The turnout of foreign voters was biggest since they got voting rights about 14 years ago
Security advisor Stanislav Secrieru pointed to multiple problems during voting process: cyber-attacks bomb threats and attempts to influence voters choices. Police had to deal with vote-buying schemes that targeted around 300000 people (which is quite big number for Moldovaʼs population)
I have heard all voices including the critical ones. And I thank you for looking past grievances past dissatisfactions‚ to protect our country
The election showed deep divide in this ex-soviet country that wants to join EU by 2030. Stoianoglo pushed for east-west balance while Sandu focused on pro-Western path - which created tension between Romanian-speaking majority and Russian-speaking minority
The win doesnt mean smooth sailing ahead: next summers parliament vote will be crucial test for Sandus team. Economy issues (caused by covid-19 aftermath and Ukraine war effects) might affect peoples support; but for now pro-EU course stays strong