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Moldova heads for presidential runoff that could derail path to Europe

People queue outside the polling station at Moldova's embassy in Moscow, Russia, October 20.
Evgenia Novozhenina/Reuters via CNN Newsource
November 02, 2024

(CNN) โ€” Moldovans are voting in the second round of a crucial presidential election, which could determine whether the post-Soviet country stays its course toward Europe or lurches back into the Kremlinโ€™s orbit.

Maia Sandu, the pro-Western president, is seeking reelection after guiding Moldova closer to the European Union than ever before while Russiaโ€™s war in Ukraine raged near its eastern border.

Sandu secured 42% of the first-round vote, held on the same day as a referendum on EU membership that passed by the thinnest of margins. Both votes were marred by a vast Kremlin-linked vote-buying scheme, which Sandu said amounted to an โ€œunprecedented assaultโ€ on Moldovaโ€™s democracy.

Moldova heads for presidential runoff that could derail path to Europe
Stoianoglo attends a press conference in Chisinau, October 21.

She faces Alexandr Stoianoglo, a former prosecutor general running for the pro-Russian Party of Socialists. If other Kremlin-friendly parties swing their support behind him, the second round will be extremely close.

In last Sundayโ€™s presidential debate, Sandu โ€“ a Harvard-educated former World Bank official who has cut ties with Moscow โ€“ called Stoianoglo a โ€œTrojan Horseโ€ seeking to infiltrate the countryโ€™s capital, Chisinau, on the Kremlinโ€™s behalf.

Analysts say this is not merely rhetorical. Valeriu Pasha, director of WatchDog.MD, a think tank, told CNN that Sundayโ€™s vote is about โ€œwhether we will have a president who is elected by citizens or someone who wins because Russian dirty money paid for it.โ€

Before last monthโ€™s votes, Ilan Shor, a Russian-backed oligarch, offered to pay people for working to elect a Russia-friendly candidate and stop the referendum passing. Sandu said the scheme sought to pay off some 300,000 voters โ€“ about 10% of the population.

Moldova heads for presidential runoff that could derail path to Europe
How Russian 'dirty money' risks rigging Moldova's presidential election

Despite polling at just over 10% before the election, Stoianoglo won more than 26% of first-round votes. Both the Kremlin and Shor have denied interference, but Moldovan officials have warned the second vote could also be targeted by similar schemes.

Apart from vote-buying, analysts say the first round revealed genuine opposition to Sandu, whose first term has been wracked by successive crises.

โ€œFirst there was the Covid-19 pandemic, then there was Russiaโ€™s war in Ukraine, then there was the gas crisis,โ€ Maksim Samorukov, a fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, told CNN.

Although Sandu has weaned Moldova off Russian gas, it came at a heavy cost to one of Europeโ€™s poorest countries. Inflation briefly rocketed to more than 30%, causing poverty to tick up.

Moldova heads for presidential runoff that could derail path to Europe
Sandu speaks in Chisinau, October 21.

Some have also criticized Sanduโ€™s โ€œcynicalโ€ decision to hold the EU referendum on the same day as the presidential election, positioning herself as the only politician capable of bringing Moldova into Europe.

โ€œThe plan of the government was that the issue of European integration will drag up the support for Maia Sandu. It turned out the other way round: The discontent with Maia Sandu dragged down the support for European integration,โ€ said Samurokov.

Stoianoglo is attempting to capitalize on discontent with Sandu by keeping one foot in both camps. He has called for a โ€œresetโ€ of relations with Moscow and said he would be willing to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin, while maintaining he is committed to joining the EU.

As a result, his platform is a mix of contradictory policies, said Samurokov: โ€œYou either support European integration, or you want to promote cooperation with Moscow. Itโ€™s very difficult to reconcile.โ€

Still, Moldovan officials are braced for a second round of voting marred by pro-Russian meddling. A defeat for Sandu would land a crushing blow for Moldovaโ€™s hopes of a European future.

A Russia-friendly government could also spell further trouble in Transnistria, a separatist sliver of territory where some 1,500 Russian troops are stationed. Officials have long questioned whether Transnistria could eventually become a second front in the war in Ukraine.

โ€œThe worst-case scenario is, if they take full control of the parliament, they gradually liquidate any democratic institutions, including free and fair elections. After that, they will use Moldova as a bridgehead behind Ukraine,โ€ Pasha told CNN.

Moldovaโ€™s election will come a week after Georgiaโ€™s, another formerly Communist state where Russia is seeking to keep its influence alive.

After the increasingly autocratic Georgian Dream party claimed victory, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claimed Russia has โ€œwonโ€ in Georgia and is on its way to doing the same in Moldova. Sundayโ€™s vote will determine whether he is right.

The-CNN-Wire
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