Romanian President Klaus Iohannis announced his resignation on Monday, which ended his mandate before the presidential elections scheduled for May and assured that his departure would avoid a crisis, as the Parliament was about to vote for his suspension.
‘In a few days, the Romanian Parliament will vote on my suspension and Romania will go into crisis…This whole endeavour will have effects internally and unfortunately also externally,’ Iohannis said.
Today was the third time that the AUR party was going to push for an impeachment procedure in the Romanian Parliament concerning Iohannis. This added to the mounting pressure since the suspension of the December presidential elections, putting Iohannis between a rock and a hard place. Finally, before his possible forced dismissal from parliament, he resigned.
Let us recall that a month ago, there was a large demonstration in Bucharest to denounce what had happened in the second round of the presidential elections, which more than 100,000 people attended.
Iohannis, echoing Joe Biden, made sure to pardon his family and the judges who suspended the presidential election before leaving, for reasons of precaution.
I had the opportunity to talk to George Simion, leader of AUR, the second-largest party in Romania, about the resignation of President Iohannis.
‘The much-awaited resignation of Klaus Iohannis is, in fact, a great victory for the opposition and the Romanian people. For those millions of people who voted against the corrupt establishment in November and December 2024, who did not accept the coup d’état of 6 December, and who can no longer stand the lies of the old political class,’ Simion said.
Simion also recalled how his party had played an essential role in trying to persuade Iohannis to resign by all means, as he believed Iohannis was a usurper and had no business being in office. That great pressure had also come from the Parliament.
‘Together with the other two sovereignist parties in the Romanian Parliament, the AUR party initiated and supported the impeachment from office of this usurper, who has abusively occupied the office of President of Romania since 21 December 2024. Today, my colleagues in Parliament have submitted for the third time the request for impeachment, given that, so far, PSD and PNL parties have used fake reasons to reject our request.’ Simion concluded by saying that the best option would be to return to the second-round scenario: ‘The natural solution to return to legality is to resume the second round of the presidential elections, which the Constitutional Court annulled without any real grounds.’
‘An election annulment must be based on transparent evidence, not classified information’
Romania is one of the most blatant cases of globalist intervention. In fact, even the Venice Commission stated that, regarding what had happened in Romania, evidence must be given: ‘An election annulment must be based on transparent evidence, not classified information.’
Supposedly, presidential elections will be held again in Romania in early May, if the Parliament approves that date. Although there may not be a complete election rerun in the end, ie now that Iohannis has resigned, Georgescu and his men are seeking to have the Constitutional Court annul the decision to suspend the elections. If this were the case, the second round would be re-run, although this scenario is more unlikely.
However, if new elections are held and Georgescu is allowed to run again, he will undoubtedly sweep the first round and not need to go to the second one. According to the last polls, Georgescu would be around 50 per cent; specifically, according to the last one published by România TV, he would obtain 47 per cent.
Europe Elects on X (formerly Twitter): "Romania, Sociopol poll:Scenario: Georgescu (*) is runningPresidential electionGeorgescu (*): 47% (-3)Ponta (*-S&D): 16% (+1)Antonescu (*-S&D|EPP): 10% (+2)Dan (*-RE): 10%Lasconi (USR-RE): 8% (-2)Simion (AUR-ECR): 4% (-2)Şoșoacă (NI): 4% (new)+/- vs. 10-15 January... pic.twitter.com/qNruL06H1u / X"
Romania, Sociopol poll:Scenario: Georgescu (*) is runningPresidential electionGeorgescu (*): 47% (-3)Ponta (*-S&D): 16% (+1)Antonescu (*-S&D|EPP): 10% (+2)Dan (*-RE): 10%Lasconi (USR-RE): 8% (-2)Simion (AUR-ECR): 4% (-2)Şoșoacă (NI): 4% (new)+/- vs. 10-15 January... pic.twitter.com/qNruL06H1u
The Globalists Are Falling
We are seeing how, little by little, globalist leaders in the West have been falling since the arrival of Donald Trump. First, it was Trudeau, now Iohannis, and we may have other names that might fall in the short term.
The conservative wave is sweeping, and we can see how it is affecting the entire world. The three main leaders of globalism, Pedro Sánchez, Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron, are embroiled in controversy, alleged corruption, and political instability in their own countries.
In the UK, Starmer is a leader who has been tremendously criticized for his attack on freedom of speech, arresting people for simply speaking their minds on social media. In addition, he has also been denounced because of the Pakistani rape gang scandal that the Labour Party said to cover up, so that racism and xenophobia would not strengthen.
In France, since the electoral advance of the legislative elections, after Le Pen’s landslide victory in the European elections, it has only brought instability and chaos to the country. In fact, since the repeat election, France has had three different Prime Ministers: Gabriel Attal, Michel Barnier and, currently, François Bayrou, not to mention the grave situation they have with massive and illegal immigration, insecurity, and economic slowdown.
In Spain, Pedro Sánchez is involved in many cases of alleged corruption. These range from things reportedly done by members of his party, including himself, to cases allegedly related to his family. In fact, his brother has ended up resigning after being investigated. The most ironic thing about his brother? At the trial, when the judge asked him where his workplace was, he couldn’t say. Can you imagine being asked where your office is and not being able to give an answer? Well, that’s what Sánchez’s brother, who had presumably been working in a public administration job for several years, did.
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