Index – Abroad – Exit Poll: DAHR and Far Right Enter, Social Democrats Beat Recovering Liberals



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The polls closed for the Romanian parliamentary elections at 9 am local time (8 am Hungarian time).

According to an exit poll commissioned by the electoral authority, AEP

to surprise, the Social Democrats (PSD) finished in the lead, receiving 30.6 percent of the vote.

Second place went to the National Liberals (NLP), led by Prime Minister Klaus Iohannis and led by Prime Minister Ludovic Orban, with 29.10 percent. Third place went to save the long-awaited anti-government force Save the Romania (USR) from street and anti-government protests by 16.4 percent.

5.7 percent voted for the list of the Hungarian association led by DAHR,

which means that Hungarians will have legislative representation in Romania for the next four years.

It is also a big surprise that the Alianța penru Unirea Românilor (AUR) – Association for the Unification of Romanians, which was founded just a year ago and was measured by the most daring pollsters at only about 4 percent, also made it to parliament. by 5.3 percent.

Traian Băsescu’s Nationalist Center Popular Movement (PMP) party stands at 5.5 percent, as does Social Liberal PRO Romania, led by former Prime Minister Victor Ponta.

The data show that the measurement was accompanied by a total disinterest,

the participation rate was 31.84 percent.

The lowest turnout to date was measured in 2008, when only 39.20 percent of voters went to the polls, representing just over seven million eligible voters. Nor was the situation much brighter four years ago, when 7.3 million people went to the trouble of exercising their right to vote.

Klaus Iohannis, former president of the National Liberal Party (PNL), has repeatedly indicated that after a possible victory for the PNL, his party would enter into a coalition with the USR.

From the UK to Valley Valley Cemetery

The AUR, the Alliance for the Unification of Romanians, was established in the United Kingdom by George Simion, who was born in the Republic of Moldova and whose most prominent claim is the unification of Romania and the Republic of Moldova. The reason for the success of the AUR, which is also apostrophizing itself as a diaspora party, is that it manages to attract Romanians disillusioned with the Social Democrats and the centrist-nationalist parties. George Simion and the AUR, for example, were regularly involved in protests in Úzvölgy, and Dan Tanasa, known for his anti-Hungarian outbursts, also maintains close ties with the party.



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