Romanian Hungarians represent about a million, or 6% of the country's population. They were always pro-Hungarian, whoever ruled Hungary. They supported Orbán and besides benefited from Orbán's support. In the penultimate presidential elections – the penultimate ones, due to the fact that they were cancelled – the winner was the leader of the extreme, pro-Russian and pro-putinist right-wing, George Simion. It's a very unusual alliance, and it's consummated with the Kremlin's open participation, which means a stream of oil money active in the Romanian elections. Ionesco wouldn't make that up.
It reminds us of an anecdote from the time of the Romanian monarchy, which enrolled in Romanian-Soviet relations in the late 1930s, erstwhile Stalin ordered Besarabia, or present-day Moldova (Moldova). King Michael sent the Romanian government a giant bill for the land Romania lost to the USSR. The Monarch felt that the government could not defend the Besarab lands, which belonged in part to the king, and should pay for it. russian Ambassador to Bucharest commented on this in 1 sentence: – Ruminy eto is not a nation. Eto profesija. (Romani is not a nation, it's a profession).
After planet War II, the Sovietization of Romania began, but besides a bizarre plexus of Stalinization and national communism, which made Romania support the USSR's intervention against the Hungarian Revolution in 1956. 3 years earlier, there was most likely an accidental printing incidental in the People's Tribune, in which a Czechoslovak ruler had printed a line with a letter error: "I Secretary of the Central Committee of the Romanian Communist Party, comrade Georgiu Dej crap a long time with his head uncovered over the coffin of Antonin Zapotocki".
The long word regulation of Nicolae Ceauşescu, which was characterized by hardened Stalinism and at the same time extremist anti-Sovietism (which was an effort to combine fire and fire), ended with the shooting of Ceauşescu's marriage. In 1989, the post-revolution period began in Romania. 1 of the first legal papers that was passed at the time was the elimination of the ban on abortion and contraception. Poland has ‘aligned’ this record.
President-elect Nicoşor Dan is an educated mathematician and earned them in Paris at the level of his doctorate. It has been in operation since 1998. He's a city movement activist. He was twice elected mayor of Bucharest. From his views he is simply a typical Romanian supporter of conflicting ideologies – in his case liberal-conservative. too the Romanian Hungarians, Dan gained 80% of Moldovan votes, 2 thirds of which are Romanians with dual citizenship – Moldovan and Romanian. Moldova is frequently called second Romania. Moldovan president Maia Sandu is simply a strong supporter of joining the European Union.
George Simion, Dan's opponent, is simply a supporter of Romania's merger with Moldova, which is not supported in Chisinau. This is among the Moldovans an thought so controversial or even poorly noted that her supporter gained a ban on entering Moldova.
Both Dan and Simion visited Poland in the pre-election period. Simion took part in Karol Nawrocki's rally, while Dan took part in Rafal Trzaskowski's rally. This is what Romanian “snows” are about.
Viktor Orbán hoped that his anti-European and prokremlian madness would meet with the support of the abroad Hungarians for the recommended Simion, but he miscalculated.








