Bucharest votes in mayoral race that could hand far right a first EU capital

Austria's Chancellor Christian Stocker and Romania's Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan review an honour guard during a welcoming ceremony in Vienna. (AP)
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Updated 07 December 2025
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Bucharest votes in mayoral race that could hand far right a first EU capital

  • The influential post has been vacant since May when centrist Nicusor Dan won a presidential election re-run one year into his second term as mayor

BUCHAREST: Bucharest could become the first European Union capital led by a hard-right mayor in Sunday’s local election, a contest which threatens Romania’s fragile pro-European coalition government.
The influential post has been vacant since May when centrist Nicusor Dan won a presidential election re-run one year into his second term as mayor.
The re-run came after Romania canceled an election on suspicion of Russian interference that favored far-right frontrunner Calin Georgescu, who is currently awaiting trial on charges of attempting to subvert national security.
Polls show TV anchor Anca Alexandrescu, running as an independent backed by the opposition hard-right Alliance for Uniting Romanians (AUR), tied for first place in the mayoral race. Analysts caution, however, that surveys may be unreliable as Romania’s biggest city isn’t a far right stronghold.
Voting closes at 1900 GMT with preliminary results expected later on Sunday.
AUR opposes military aid to neighboring Ukraine, is critical of EU leadership and supportive of US President Donald Trump’s policies including on energy and immigration.
Alexandrescu’s main rivals all come from the broad coalition government: leftist Social Democrat Daniel Baluta who polls show to be tied in first place, Ciprian Ciucu, the protégé of Liberal Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan, and Catalin Drula of center-right Save Romania Union (USR), which backed Dan’s presidential bid.
The Social Democrats (PSD), without whom a ruling pro-European majority could not be formed, joined the government on condition that each party had separate mayoral candidates, undermining center-right Ciucu and Drula.
“On the one hand, the stakes for AUR are huge, winning the capital would dispel the idea of a sanitary cordon isolating extremist parties,” said Sergiu Miscoiu, a political science professor at Babes-Bolyai University.
“On the other, if any of the ruling coalition’s candidates wins, then it will change the balance of power in the ruling coalition.”
Alexandrescu, a former PSD spokeswoman, was a vocal supporter of Georgescu — who did not endorse her or any other candidate — and is targeting the same voters angry at mainstream parties they perceive as incompetent and corrupt.
The government faces a no-confidence vote this month over judicial pension reform. AUR has said it would be willing to ally with the Social Democrats, who have rejected the idea but some of whom are pushing for the resignation of Prime Minister Bolojan over austerity plans.
Last year’s canceled election plunged Romania into its worst political crisis in decades, exposed its deep vulnerability to hybrid attacks and disinformation, divided voters, crashed markets and threatened the country’s investment-grade rating.


Germany’s Merz and Ukraine’s Zelensky praise truce efforts

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Germany’s Merz and Ukraine’s Zelensky praise truce efforts

  • Donald Trump said Vladimir Putin had agreed to a week-long halt on attacks

BERLIN: German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday welcomed “efforts in favor of a truce,” Berlin said, after Donald Trump said Vladimir Putin had agreed to a week-long halt on attacks on Ukraine’s power grid.
Merz at the same time stressed that “the systematic and brutal destruction of Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure by Russian attacks” was “still ongoing,” which he condemned “in the strongest terms,” his spokesman, Stefan Kornelius, said.