Who is
winning the Romanian election?
Surveys show
the centrist Bucharest mayor catching up with hard-right populist George Simion
ahead of Sunday’s vote. But is this poll surge too late, or even real?
May 16, 2025
4:01 am CET
By Tim Ross,
Andrei Popoviciu and Max Griera
https://www.politico.eu/article/romanian-presidential-election-george-simion-nicusor-dan/
ALBA IULIA,
Romania — The contest for the Romanian presidency is almost over.
Sunday’s
vote will determine whether a strategically vital NATO member on the EU’s
eastern edge takes a turn against Ukraine under the disruptive influence of a
hard-right populist, or remains firmly anchored in the traditional pro-Brussels
mainstream.
In the lead
after the first round is the Donald Trump-loving George Simion, a 38-year-old
nationalist who opposes aid to Ukraine and has previously favored uniting
Romania with its neighbor Moldova.
His opponent
in Sunday’s second round runoff vote is moderate, centrist mathematician
Nicușor Dan, 55, who has been the independent mayor of Romania’s capital,
Bucharest, since 2020. Dan promises to keep Romania on its European and
pro-Western trajectory and has called on Trump to take a harder line with
Russia.
Their
contest has at times taken on the air of a schoolyard stand-off: Simion, who is
constantly picking conflicts with his critics, ridiculed the soft-spoken
intellectual Dan as “autistic” on Thursday.
“We are
basically winning,” Simion told POLITICO in separate remarks during a visit to
Brussels on Thursday. “The only thing we need is fair and free elections, all
the institutions to act in a normal, correct way, and we will finish first when
the last vote [has] been counted. I have a rather optimistic view on it, on the
final result, I think it will be a landslide.”
Is he right
to be so confident?
The polls
In the first
round of the election, Simon won 41 percent of the vote to Dan’s 21 per cent.
The question is whether Simion can maintain that huge advantage — or if Dan can
attract enough support from backers of other parties to overtake him in
Sunday’s second round.
In the early
polls looking at the head-to-head contest after the first vote, Simion retained
a comfortable lead — at 55 percent to Dan’s 45, in one survey commissioned by
the Bucharest mayor himself.
But more
recent polls have shown the gap narrowing significantly as decision day gets
closer.
On
Wednesday, a poll of 4,000 people by AtlasIntel put the two candidates level on
48 percent each. Crucially, AtlasIntel included a sample of the large Romanian
diaspora population, among whom Simion is hugely popular.
Then, on
Thursday, Dan took the lead in a poll for the first time, with 52 percent to
Simion’s 48 percent. That survey, by independent research institute IRSOP,
canvassed some 950 people.
Many
Romanians are reluctant to say how they will vote, with some fearing
repercussions. Given the high level of cynicism regarding the process, and the
fact the polls previously underestimated support for right-wingers, are such
surveys truly reliable?
“Yes, they
can be trusted,” said Radu Magdin, a former Romanian government adviser who is
now CEO of Smartlink Communications. “It’s going to be really tight on Sunday.
It’s highly unlikely that Simion wins with a margin. Either he wins close or
even it’s a high possibility that Nicușor Dan catches up and wins, based on an
increased participation.”
The air war
Romania’s
election has been fought largely on TV and on social media. Neither of the two
candidates spent much time on the ground, touring the country, in the final
days, and there has been no pressing the flesh or holding rallies in key
constituencies. Simion hasn’t even been in the country.
Both have
instead relied on rallying their voters online and via TV appearances.
Dan has
taken part in multiple debates on television, where he has given polished if
sometimes pedestrian answers to questions.
Simion, by
contrast, has only taken part in one direct debate involving Dan, which was
seen to have helped the Bucharest mayor. Dan’s supporters have repeatedly
complained that Simion won’t show up to TV debates, adopting the image of an
empty chair to symbolize their opponent.
Romania’s
national broadcaster scheduled a final TV question-and-answer “debate” for each
candidate — with Dan appearing on Thursday and Simion due to take his turn on
Friday. But Simion failed to confirm his participation, leading the broadcaster
to call it off.
Instead,
Simion has used a regular flow of social media messages to ram home his
radical, Trumpist offering. He has attacked the mainstream media, alleging they
distort their coverage of his political positions, and has even hauled
journalists into his office to give them an angry scolding before posting the
video on X.
He has also
radically changed his game in the last few days. This week he has toured
Europe, perhaps to bolster his international credentials, meeting hard-right
allies in Poland, Italy and Brussels.
During an
exchange with a reporter in Brussels on Thursday, Simion said: “You have a
candidate you’re supporting, he’s autistic, poor guy.”
Dan hit
back: “Wanting to be president and using ‘autistic’ as an insult is
unacceptable.”
Policy
clashes
When it
comes to policy, Simion has promised to follow Trump’s approach to the Ukraine
war and to emulate his governing style more generally, cutting taxes and
boosting business while stamping out “woke” ideology and backing traditional
Christian and family values.
Amid
criticism that he has been too pro-Putin, Simion has recently talked up his
belief in NATO. While avoiding outright
anti-EU postures, he has also claimed to stand up for Romania in negotiations
with the bloc, and on Thursday accused French President Emmanuel Macron of
having “dictatorial tendencies” — the kind of comment that wouldn’t be out of
place coming from Trump.
Dan,
meanwhile, has called on Trump to put more pressure on Putin in peace
negotiations with Ukraine and has vowed to continue to steer Romania along its
pro-European and Western path, describing Simion as a “Russian gazette.”
Turnout
In the end,
voter turnout is likely to be the deciding factor. Analysts, including those
within Dan’s camp, believe the higher the turnout, the better for the Bucharest
mayor.
“Historically
there is a higher turnout with around 10 per cent more in the 2nd round of
presidential elections compared with the first round,” said analyst Magdin.
If turnout
remains at the level of round one — up to 55 percent — Simion would likely win,
he said. “At 60 percent-plus, suddenly Nicușor Dan becomes the most probable
winner.”
One official
working on Dan’s team told POLITICO that mobilizing new voters will be key. To
win Dan needs 11 million people to turn out compared to the 9.5 million in the
first round, the official said.
Georgescu’s
ghost
Simion is
the front-runner after ultranationalist Georgescu, the far-right shock victor
of last year’s canceled election, was disqualified. Romanian authorities said
foreign interference had helped propel him to victory.
Many voters
in Romania — including those who did not back Georgescu — felt aggrieved that
faceless officials and judges could abort an election. People in Romania
commonly describe democracy as a sham and demand that the country’s “corrupt”
political system be torn down.
Simion is
the chief beneficiary of this anger, though Dan also promises to enact change
and portrays himself as an “anti-system” politician.
Foreign
votes
The Romanian
diaspora could swing the Sunday vote results either way. An estimated 4 million
Romanians live abroad, 970,000 of whom voted in the first round — with about 60
percent backing Simion.
Voting has
already begun among the diaspora for round two. “The polls that we’ve seen
until now are not accurate because they don’t cover the diaspora,” said Elena
Calistru, civic activist and president of Funky Citizen NGO. “In the previous
elections, the turnout for the diaspora was more than one million people.”
“The huge
difference we saw between the two candidates in the first round of the
elections is indeed closing in, and Nicușor Dan is on the rise,” she said. “The
turnout will be fundamental.”
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