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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: July 6th, 2024

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  • @Bienenvolk there’s quite a strong propaganda, coming from the traditional parties (PSD - Social Democrats and PNL - National Liberals) claiming, but later taken by the extremist parties, demonizing him because he said he doesn’t say I love you to his children (or something like that), because he’s not married to his partner despite having children and living with her for so long, the fact that he’s still living in a rented house at his age etc.

    Most notably, he is a friend of a man called Matei Păun, who had business with Russia and Belarus and held some questionable views a while ago, but he emphasized repeatedly that he doesn’t share his views. And George Simion is a persona non-grata in both Ukraine and Moldova, and pushed a lot of anti-Ukraine and anti-Moldovan narratives, so this fact was irrelevant as well.

    He pretty much has the appearance of a modest man, just a regular guy doing every day stuff, driving a 20-year-old Renault Clio and living with his family, taking care of his children, something along the lines.

    I’m personally following him since a while, and what I noticed was that in the previous campaign for the city hall of Bucharest, even when his opponents attacked him, they did it in a somewhat respectful way (don’t know how to explain it). So he does seem like a man who gets respect and decency without explicitly asking for it.

    Imo I think we’ll have some interesting 5 years ahead.


  • @thorhop As a centrist, he did great things while being the mayor of Bucharest. He reorganized the public transit to cover more areas previously uncovered, brought new vehicles to the fleet (both trams, buses and trolleybuses), signed contracts to repair the tram lines that give you a bumpy ride and haven’t been repaired since ages (funding is due from the EU, as the local budget was sabotaged by the “social-democrats” in the local council) and contracted a consulting company to create a master plan for a bike path network all around the city. He also focused on repairing the aging central heating pipes so that we won’t have problems with heating in the winter anymore, especially by replacing them with new pipes with special sensors to detect leaking in time. Public lighting was also switched to LED on multiple arteries, saving money and electricity at the same time, and he managed to complete the water treatment plant at Glina, a project that should have been finished years ago by the previous “social-democrat” mayors.

    Imo he’s more than just an alternative, he’s simply the way to go, and I’m glad he’s now a president.









  • @kek the only external influence that has been going on was the Russian one, and it’s been happening in basically all the European countries - if not in many of them: Germany, Poland, Bulgaria, probably the Baltics too, etc.

    Yes, we voted against the establishment, and we now have two candidates that positioned themselves as such. However, one of these candidates has a strong nationalistic rhetoric, wants us to stop helping Ukraine, the country that literally acts as a shield against Russia to us, to not help Moldova and its people despite being a strong unionist in the past (it’s how he gained the popularity of today) and despite moldovans and us being pretty much the same people (today’s Moldova is the result of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact which pretty much drew the border of nowaday’s Eastern Europe). He literally wants to leave two of our neighbors at the whim of Russia, and isolate us from the rest of the world, bringing that Georgescu guy as a president or as a prime minister (depending on what fits best) - a guy that said he literally wants to do away with all the political parties altogether (not just with the existing ones, but in general) - imo this is clearly extremely undemocratic.

    The other guy that’s running for president literally fought in court with the authorities for giving illegal building permits, created the first actually new party since around the '90s upon its creation (most of the others were just creations of older politicians becoming unhappy with their mothership and creating another party and another party, but not bringing any new face in the game) and won the city hall of Bucharest twice, despite facing an ugly disinformation campaign from the established parties. Once in office, he managed to get the finances of the city straight (the previous mayor literally bankrupted the city, but he hid this fact from the public out of fear that the creditors would start asking for money straight away, stranding the local budget even more), he contracted EU funds for repairing the city’s heating pipes (we have pretty much the biggest central heating system in the country), bought new trams, new buses, new trolleybuses, stopped the lawsuits against the journalists (that, again, the previous mayor started because they were too uncomfortable), gradually closed most of the public companies the previous mayor started as a way to siphon public funds etc. Yes, he’s not perfect, he hasn’t really done any wonders while in office so far, there’s still a lot to do for this city, but the intention of him is very clear and because of this he’s a better fit for many as a candidate, even to the post-1989 establishment.

    There’s much more to say about both, but this is largely the political landscape we’re faced with the next Sunday. Hope this also clears things up for you too to a certain degree. :)



  • @kek no, democracy is not when you ban your opponents. Democracy is when you sanction contenders if they don’t respect the rules of the game. When they declare 0 spending in online campaigns, when they don’t properly label their political propaganda material as such (even when the law requests it), when they do not disclose their spending but they spend huge amounts of cash coming from far-right affiliates and other sketchy sources, when they threaten with riots or outright coups involving mercenaries that fought in Congo alongside Wagner, this is when the rules of the game are not respected.

    I would be more concerned for democracy if we would have only two political forces and barring one from running would make the other one the only choice, than barring a sketchy guy from entering the race.

    Just fyi, we had 11 candidates this election and we had 3 debates last week, where all of them were invited.