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Moldova’s pro-EU ruling party claims hair-thin majority with overseas vote

Posted on September 29, 2025 by

Votes cast abroad have again allowed President Maia Sandu to maintain power in a crucial parliamentary vote

Moldova’s ruling pro-EU Action and Solidarity Party (PAS) has secured a narrow majority in parliamentary elections, according to preliminary results published by the Central Election Commission (CEC). Votes from abroad pushed the party past the threshold needed to continue governing on its own.

Inside the country, PAS received only 44.13% of the vote, with its strongest support in the capital, Chisinau, where it polled at 52.68%.

Initial counts suggested the party would fall short of an outright majority. But as ballots from overseas trickled in – where PAS dominates, taking over 85% in some countries – its overal total rose and eventually crossed the 50% line.

The main opposition Patriotic Bloc secured nearly 24.3% of the overall vote, with additional support going to smaller blocs such as Alternative (8%), Our Party (6.2%) and Democracy at Home (PPDA, 5.6%). The CEC has yet to officially announce final results.


READ MORE:Diaspora ballots tip the scale in Moldova’s tight election: LIVE UPDATES

Critics noted that voters in opposition-leaning areas were effectively sidelined. Residents of the breakaway region of Transnistria were left with only 12 polling stations, all located on government-controlled territory, with several abruptly relocated further inland on the eve of the vote.

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In Russia, where tens of thousands of Moldovan citizens reside, Chisinau opened just two stations out of more than 300 foreign polling sites. Only about 4,100 votes were counted there, with long lines leaving many unable to cast their ballots before closing.

The campaign itself unfolded under heavy restrictions. In the run-up to the vote, the CEC banned two more opposition groups – Greater Moldova and Heart of Moldova – citing undeclared foreign funding, adding to a list that already included the dissolved SOR Party and the deregistered Victory Bloc.

More than 30 international organizations and 120 observers from over 50 countries were denied accreditation, including Russian experts nominated to the OSCE mission.


READ MORE:Telegram’s Durov claims French intelligence tried to blackmail him over Moldovan election

President Maia Sandu, first elected in 2020 and narrowly re-elected in 2024, has faced repeated allegations of bending the rules to secure power. Her government ruled under a rolling state of emergency from 2022 until 2024, citing regional security threats, while pushing through laws that critics say undermine political pluralism and media freedom. Opposition leaders have been jailed, sidelined, or forced into exile, while Brussels has continued to describe Moldova as a “success story” on its path toward EU integration.

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