Pro-EU party delivers boost to West with victory in Moldova elections despite Russian interference claims

Moldova’s ruling pro-Western party won a resounding victory in parliamentary elections on Monday, overcoming several pro-Kremlin opponents in a vote overshadowed by accusations of Russian interference.
President Maia Sandu’s Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) had secured 50.2 per cent of the vote with all ballots counted by Monday. The pro-Russian Patriotic Electoral Bloc coalition sat at less than 25 per cent.
Electoral data indicate the PAS will hold a clear majority of about 55 of the 101 seats in the legislature.
PAS’s surprise majority comes as a major boost for the country’s bid to join the European Union by 2030 and break away from Moscow’s orbit amid rising tensions on Europe’s eastern frontier. The vote was widely seen as a choice for the electorate between aligning more closely with the West or folding back into Russia’s sphere of influence.
Ahead of the election, the government in Chisinau had accused Moscow of deliberately attempting to sway the vote through widespread disinformation and vote-buying. Russia denied the accusations.
National Security adviser Stanislav Secrieru claimed election infrastructure and government websites were hit by cyberattacks, and that fake bomb threats had been called in to polling stations in Moldova and abroad. Three people were also arrested in Moldova on suspicion of plotting unrest.
Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky hailed Moldova’s election result, saying Moscow had failed to “destabilise” the country.
“These elections showed that Russia’s destabilising activity loses, while Moldova in Europe wins,” he wrote on X. “Russian subversion, constant disinformation – none of this worked. It is important that Moldova was effective in defending itself against threats together with all who helped.”
Russian officials denied interference in the election and, in turn, accused the Moldovan government of meddling.
Igor Dodon, leading the pro-Russian bloc, claimed victory before results were announced and rejected the outcome, claiming allies were compiling evidence of electoral violations.
He called for a peaceful protest outside parliament today.
Leonid Slutsky, head of the Committee on International Affairs in Russia’s parliament, said on Telegram there had been “violations of electoral rights and freedoms, large-scale purges of the political space, and blatant falsifications”.
“The Sandu regime is leading Moldova down the path of Ukraine,” he said.
Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission president, hailed the outcome in a post on X: “Moldova, you’ve done it again. No attempt to sow fear or division could break your resolve.”