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There were eight names on the ballots.
Sunday, November 1 Presidential elections were held in Moldova… The polling stations closed at 21:00 local time (coinciding with Kiev). There were eight names on the ballots.
At the closing of the polling stations at 9:00 p.m., voter turnout was 42.73%.
In the second roundc, according to exit polls (your data is radically different, however), Two candidates pass: the current president of Moldova, Igor Dodon, and the former prime minister Maia Sandu.
Exit Survey Results Commissioned by Watchdog Regarding the vote for the President of Moldova on November 1, 2020:
- 1) Igor Dodon, incumbent president, supporter of pro-Russian politics: 40.9%.
- 2) Maya Sandu, leader of the opposition party Action and Solidarity, former prime minister, supporter of pro-European politics: 34.6%.
- 3) Renato Usatyj, the head of Our Party, the mayor of Balti – 11.5%.
- 4) Violet Ivanov, Shore group PM: 6.3%.
- 5) Andrei Nastase, head of the political platform Dignity and Truth – 2.9%.
- 6) Octavio Cicu, candidate of the National Unity Party – 1.7%.
- 7) Dorin Chirtoaca, leader of the Liberal Party, supporter of the unification of Moldova with Romania – 1.3%.
- 8) Tudor Deliu, Liberal Democratic candidate: 0.9%.
Exit Survey Results Commissioned by Intellect Group Regarding the vote for the President of Moldova on November 1, 2020:
- 1) Igor Dodon, incumbent president, supporter of pro-Russian politics: 28.5%.
- 2) Maya Sandu, leader of the opposition party Action and Solidarity, former prime minister, supporter of pro-European politics – 21.5%.
- 3) Renato Usatyj, the head of Our Party, the mayor of Balti – 8.8%.
- 4) Violet Ivanov, Shore Party MP – 5.5%.
- 5) Andrei Nastase, head of the political platform “Dignity and Truth” – 4.5%.
The other three candidates received the fewest number of votes from those surveyed. 29% of those surveyed did not answer the question from sociologists. Almost 2.6 thousand voters participated in the Intellect Group poll.
Now, following the announcement of the official voting results, the second round of the presidential elections in Moldova should be designated.
Let us remember that in the previous presidential elections in Moldova in 2016, Dodon and Sandu also reached the second electoral round. Then the pro-Russian politician Dodon won. Even during the 2016 election campaign, Igor Dodon called Crimea a “Russian” Ukraine, putting official contacts between Kiev and Chisinau on a four-year hiatus.
TSH.ua analyzed, What can Ukraine expect from elections in a neighboring republic?, who has a chance to win and why Russia is already in full swing, scatters the fakes about the “color revolution” on the Belarusian model.
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