In a scenario that evokes memories of the period immediately following the end of the Cold War, a Central European nation is locked in a battle to fend off Russian influence while safeguarding its democracy. But this time around, there is a critical twist: As Romania strives to maintain the integrity of its representative government, one of the states seemingly working against it is the United States.
This weekend, Romania’s election authority, the Central Electoral Bureau, disqualified far-right populist candidate Calin Georgescu from participating in May’s rerun of the presidential election, ruling that he had “violated the fundamental obligation to defend democracy.” Georgescu won the first round of the election in November, but Romania’s Constitutional Court later annulled the results after intelligence reports alleged that he had benefited from an aggressive Russian-sponsored propaganda campaign on the social media platform TikTok.
Almost immediately after Sunday’s announcement, Georgescu appealed the election authority’s decision, calling it a “direct blow to the heart of democracy around the world.” His supporters took to the streets of Bucharest in protest, attempting to storm the election authority’s headquarters. The demonstration quickly descended into violence, leaving four police officers hospitalized.