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Indebta > News > Hard-right candidate wins Romania’s election rerun — exit polls
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Hard-right candidate wins Romania’s election rerun — exit polls

News Room
Last updated: 2025/05/04 at 2:57 PM
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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.

Hard-right leader George Simion has won the first round of Romania’s presidential election, according to exit polls, and will face one of two pro-EU centrists in the run-off vote on May 18.

Simion won 33 per cent according to an exit poll by CURS, with Crin Antonescu, the joint candidate of three centrist government parties, on 23 per cent.

A second exit poll by Avangarde also put Simion in the lead on 33 per cent, but said Antonescu was neck and neck with Nicușor Dan, the liberal, independent mayor of the capital Bucharest, on 23 per cent.

The vote was rerun after the victory of ultranationalist politician Călin Georgescu in the first-round ballot in November was annulled by the constitutional court over allegations of Russian interference. Georgescu, an ally of Simion, was subsequently barred from standing in the new ballot.

The cancellation of November’s result was sharply criticised by US President Donald Trump’s administration, with vice-president JD Vance saying it was an example of Europe’s liberal elite failing to uphold democratic freedoms.

Provisional results are expected later on Sunday, with a final tally to be announced on Monday morning.

The popular support for Simion, leader of the nationalist AUR party whose campaign was endorsed by Georgescu, is a further sign of Romanian voters’ deep disenchantment with the mainstream political elites, which have shared power since the end of communism.

Simion, a pro-Trump rightwing populist, told the FT on Sunday that if elected president he would try to bring back Georgescu to a leadership position to reflect his popularity.

“In a democracy, you let the people decide,” Simion said. “So as a president, I can change the members of the constitutional court, the members of the secret services, so I can assure fair elections and I can be a mediator to find the majority in the parliament. This is the way we can think of having him as . . . prime minister.”

Simion’s second-round rival is expected to try to form an alliance of all mainstream forces to defeat Simion, but may struggle to do so.

“I’m not too worried about such an alliance,” Simion said. “This is only a smoke bomb, a diversion [from the fact] that I’m not the extremist, the hooligan, the isolationist they are portraying me to be.”

A woman in Bucharest votes in the first round of Romania’s rerun presidential election © Robert Ghement/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Georgescu had polled well over 40 per cent before he was barred from running again in March. In a show of unity, the two men cast their ballots together in a Bucharest suburb where some supporters chanted pro-Georgescu slogans.

The annulment thrust Romania into a political crisis at a sensitive moment. Its credit rating outlook has recently been cut to negative by Moody’s. It is in dire need of reforms as it struggles to tackle the EU’s highest budget deficit.

A key contributor to Nato efforts to contain Russian manoeuvres in the Black Sea region, Romania is an important route for exports from Ukraine and has also offered military aid for its neighbour.

As voting proceeded on Sunday, a Russian hacker group claimed to have shut down the websites of several government ministries and Antonescu’s campaign page. But the denial-of-service attack was foiled quickly, the national cyber security centre said in a statement.

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News Room May 4, 2025 May 4, 2025
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