
Hungarian minority plays key role in Dan's Romanian presidential win
The Romanian Hungarian minority also played a strong part, as in both rounds, the counties where they live were overwhelmingly in favour of Dan.
That's according to István Székely, the vice president of the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (RMDSZ), who said those factors meant a victory for Dan rather than "the extremist and anti-Hungarian George Simion."
Székely told Euronews that Dan could launch a centre-right presidential movement, similar to that of Emmanuel Macron in France, but he does not believe that the country's current party structure will allow for immediate change.
The leader of the Hungarian minority group noted that both candidates represented radical change.
"It's true that they wanted to take the country in opposite directions, but the need for radical change unites them", Székely said.
"With the current composition of the parliament, it will be difficult to meet this demand, but at the same time, I think early elections are out of the question for various reasons."
But regarding what happened at the polls, Székely admitted that the presidential election did finish according to the RMDSZ's predictions. He said the alternative candidate they supported against George Simion did not win, but voters understood the election's stakes and chose instead to back the pro-Europe Dan.
"A victory for George Simion would have been dangerous in any case, given his record and aggressiveness," said analyst and lawyer, Péter Eckstein-Kovács, a well-respected minister and former senator in the Romanian parliament.
"This danger was felt by the vast majority of Hungarians in Transylvania. They voted for Nicușor not out of fear, but out of common sense. If there is a dangerous person, let's shoot him," the former RMDSZ politician said when asked if Hungarians in Transylvania had anything to fear.
"We will be left with about five million xenophobes in the future. It is not easy to digest."
George Simion, the hard-right, nationalist leader of the Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR), had election flyers printed with a photo of himself alongside one of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán with the slogan "The Romanians can count on the Hungarians in their fight for Christianity and sovereignty."
While saying he does not interfere in Romania's election, Orbán appeared to support Simion in the runoff, while the Romanian nationalist candidate repeatedly tried to obtain the Hungarian prime minister's endorsement and thus his influence on the Romanian Hungarian voters for the battle in which every ballot counted.
As part of his strategy, Simion recalibrated his nationalist political platform in the second round, appealing to the Hungarian community — known for its disciplined approach to voting — and their party.
During the campaign for the second round, political sources in Budapest told Euronews that emissaries from Simion's campaign had been in contact with Orbán's government, ahead of the decisive vote last Sunday
Just as the runoff campaign began, Orbán referenced Simion in a speech in the Hungarian town of Tihany and then on social media saying that while 'Romania's elections are none of our business ... we assure the Romanian people and their future president: Hungary stands for unity, not division."
"We will not support any form of political isolation against Romania or its leaders. Romanians can count on Hungarians in their fight for Christianity and sovereignty,' Orbán emphasised.
Yet Orbán's statement drew immediate backlash from UDMR/RMDSZ President Kelemen Hunor, who responded in a Facebook video that 'Simion is not a friend of the Hungarians — and never will be.'
'George Simion is not a sovereignist; he is a charlatan. Each cell (in his body) represents the principle that Hungarians don't have a place in Romania,' Hunor said.
Orbán then spoke with Hunor by phone, reiterating that Hungary does not interfere in Romania's election and that ultimately the Hungarian party's position prevails in this debate: 'the Hungarian government deems that Romania's Hungarian Democratic Party's position to be decisive, the interest of the Transylvanian Hungarians is indicative."
"We have always cooperated with all Romanian leaders, of all times, for the progress of the Transylvanian Hungarians' life and existence," Orbán said.
On Tuesday, Eckstein-Kovács told Euronews that "Orbán shot himself in the foot with his pro-Simion comments in Tihany,"
"He did so after the RMDSZ, the civil sector, and church leaders had all urged support for Nicușor. He believed that Transylvanians loved him so much that they were unthinkingly following his recommendations and growing the anti-EU far-right party group. Well, it didn't work," Eckstein-Kovács added.
"The Transylvanians voted against Simion in their own well-perceived interest. But very much so. The Orbán effect has been shattered," he said.
Orbán has since congratulated Dan on his victory in the Romanian presidential elections, saying in a post on X he looked forward to "working together on strengthening the cooperation between Hungary and Romania, to the benefit of our peoples."
Historian Stefano Bottoni believes the RMDSZ found it challenging to walk the tightrope and satisfy both Budapest and Bucharest after Orbán seemed to pledge support for Simion.
Bottoni described the Hungarian prime minister's move not so much an international violation but rather a political mistake.
"It's a transnational space; everybody interferes in everything. I don't see a serious sovereignty problem here," Bottoni told Euronews.
According to Bottoni, Orbán's mistake was in thinking that what works in Hungary will also work in Romania.
"The RMDSZ has found itself between two seats: there is Bucharest, where it is part of a government and a long-established member of the political elite, and there is Budapest, where it has very different expectations and it cannot meet both," Bottoni explained.
Bottoni stressed that what Orbán offered was an alliance that would have been critical for Romania's Hungarian community.
"The fact that the Hungarian prime minister did not see this or did not care is a cause for reflection, because it has been a long time since Viktor Orbán made such a serious political mistake in Hungarian-Hungarian political relations," he said.
The fact that two candidates critical of the political system made it to the second round also shows that mainstream parties failed to take advantage of the reprieve offered by the runoff.
"It is clear that something has to change," Bottoni added.
"The only way for the democratic political system to survive this crisis is to come up with something: whether it's a new coalition, new formations, new ideas, a new style of governance. I think that Romanian democracy has a chance now and it is very important not to miss it, because there may not be a second one."
In Romania, the president's office is more than just ceremonial. In addition to approving laws passed by parliament and heading the military, the president is also in charge of foreign policy, representing the country at the European Council.
Mexico City Mayor Clara Brugada's personal secretary Ximena Guzmán and adviser José Muñoz were assassinated as they travelled to work on Tuesday morning, the country's authorities have said.
The two were shot dead at around 7 am on a busy thoroughfare in the capital's Moderna neighbourhood. An investigation has been launched into their murders, which experts say show the hallmarks of an organised crime hit.
It is the worst attack in recent years against public officials in the capital — where political violence is less common than in other parts of the country.
Photos from the crime scene show an Audi's windscreen riddled with bullet holes.
Mexico security analyst David Saucedo, who questioned why someone as senior as Guzmán did not have a security detail, said the murders were likely carried out to put pressure on Brugada's administration.
Mexican President Sheinbaum, of the Morena party to which Brugada also belongs, condemned the killings at her daily morning press conference.
'We will not let this cowardly act go unpunished,' said Omar García Harfuch, the country's security minister who survived an assassination attempt five years ago while he was the city's police chief.
Brugada paid tribute to Guzmán and Muñoz shortly after their deaths, before vowing to continue her administration's 'relentless fight against insecurity'.
Mexico capital's mayor, who had worked with them both for years, called Guzmán a 'wonderful, tireless' person and described Muñoz as 'one of the most intelligent people' she had ever met.
'We in the city's cabinet are shocked and mourn the loss of two dear comrades,' Brugada said.
Homicides in Mexico City in the first quarter of 2025 were slightly up from the same period the previous year.
The murders on Tuesday follow the recent killings of political figures elsewhere in the country, including a mayoral candidate in Veracruz state who was gunned down along with three others at a campaign rally earlier this month.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
Putin says he won't back down from Ukraine goals in hour-long call with Trump
Russian President Vladimir Putin told US President Donald Trump in a phone call on Thursday that Moscow wants a negotiated end to the Ukraine war but will not step back from its original goals, a Kremlin aide said. In a wide-ranging conversation that also covered Iran and the Middle East, Trump "again raised the issue of an early end to military action" in Ukraine, the aide, Yuri Ushakov, told reporters. "Vladimir Putin, for his part, noted that we continue to seek a political and negotiated solution to the conflict," Ushakov said. Putin briefed Trump on the implementation of agreements reached between Russia and Ukraine last month to exchange prisoners-of-war and dead soldiers, Ushakov said, and told him that Moscow was ready to continue negotiations with Kyiv. "Our president also said that Russia will achieve the goals it has set: that is, the elimination of the well-known root causes that led to the current state of affairs, to the current acute confrontation, and Russia will not back down from these goals," he added. There was nothing in the Kremlin readout to suggest that Putin had made any shift in Moscow's position during the conversation with Trump, who took office with a promise to end the war swiftly but has voiced frequent frustration with the lack of progress between the two sides. The phrase "root causes" is shorthand for the Kremlin's argument that it was compelled to go to war in Ukraine to prevent the country from joining NATO and being used by the Western alliance as a launch pad to attack Russia. Ukraine and its European allies say that is a specious pretext for what they call an imperial-style war, but Trump in previous public comments has shown sympathy with Moscow's refusal to accept NATO membership for Ukraine. Putin and Trump did not talk about the US decision to halt some shipments of critical weapons to Ukraine, Ushakov said. On Iran, he said, "the Russian side emphasised the importance of resolving all disputes, disagreements and conflict situations exclusively by political and diplomatic means". Trump last month sent US military bombers to strike three Iranian nuclear sites, in a move condemned by Moscow as unprovoked and illegal.


Euronews
3 hours ago
- Euronews
Moldova's pushes to join the EU with or without Ukraine
As Moldova prepares to host a pivotal bilateral summit with the European Union this Friday in Chișinău, President Maia Sandu and her pro-European government are making a concerted push to accelerate the country's accession to the EU - potentially outpacing neighbouring Ukraine. Despite repeated hybrid attacks from Russia and economic headwinds, Moldova is eager to present its recent progress in aligning with EU standards as grounds for decoupling its enlargement track from Ukraine's. But Brussels remains cautious. A source within the Danish EU rotating presidency told Euronews that 'the decoupling of the enlargement process between Moldova and Ukraine is not for now.' EU leaders are wary that allowing Moldova to pull ahead might send the wrong signal - suggesting strategic acquiescence to Russia's destabilising goals in the region. From the EU's perspective, enlargement is not just a bureaucratic process; it's a geopolitical message. Maintaining a unified approach to Moldova and Ukraine is seen as a way to underscore solidarity and resist external manipulation. Romanian MEP Siegfried Mureșan, head of the EU–Moldova Parliamentary Association Committee, is one of Moldova's most vocal advocates in Brussels. He argues that the small nation is not only progressing quickly but would also require a lighter lift from EU institutions compared to Ukraine. 'Integrating the Republic of Moldova into the EU will be a smaller effort,' Mureșan told Euronews. 'The integration of small countries is easier than the integration of bigger countries. Moldova is a small country, and with our support, it can achieve a lot with sums that are not significant for the EU—but are transformative for Moldova.' Growth plan and economic resilience The EU is expected to unveil a three-year, €1.9 billion growth plan for Moldova - partly funded through loans and grants with the backing of the European Investment Bank. The investment aims to boost Moldova's economy and reduce its vulnerability to external pressures, particularly from Russia. 'We know Russia blackmailed it with high energy prices,' said Mureșan. 'The country suffered under high inflation; we need to strengthen its economy.' Moldova's energy infrastructure has undergone a significant transformation since 2022. It is now connected to the European electricity grid, and the EU has financed major upgrades to its domestic distribution systems. Chişinău has also committed to generating 27% of its energy from renewable sources by 2030. Despite setbacks - including a slowdown attributed to the energy shock from the war in Ukraine - the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) considers Moldova's economy resilient. In a landmark shift, over 50% of Moldovan exports went to the EU in 2024 - the highest in the country's history. Hybrid threats and strategic pressure from Russia Brussels remains acutely aware of the internal and external pressures facing Moldova. While public opinion is split between pro-Western and pro-Russian sentiment, the breakaway Transnistrian region - still under de facto Russian control - remains a source of instability. 'The Russian-speaking minority and companies in the so-called Transnistrian region benefit from European integration. More than 70% of their exports go to the European market. So I think Russia will continue to try to destabilise it,' said Mureșan, emphasising the paradox of Russian influence in the region. Security cooperation is already deepening. Under the EU–Moldova Security and Defence Partnership, the EU has allocated €197 million through the European Peace Facility (2021–2025) to modernise Moldova's armed forces. Moldova and Ukraine both applied for EU membership in March 2022 and were granted candidate status in June that year. Formal accession talks began in June 2024 - but how, and when, each country progresses remains politically sensitive. For now, Brussels appears unwilling to split the tracks. But if Moldova can continue demonstrating tangible reform, economic resilience, and geopolitical reliability, the case for accelerated accession may prove harder to ignore.


Euronews
3 hours ago
- Euronews
'Putin needs war to stay in power', Estonia's PM Kristen Michal tells Euronews
Estonia's Prime Minister, Kristen Michal, has told Euronews that if Russia is to end the war in Ukraine, then President Vladimir Putin would have to answer a raft of uncomfortable questions from his own people, so continuing the fighting means he stays in power. 'Putin needs conflict, like fish needs water, because if you don't have a conflict, then probably people in Russia will be asking: Where is my son? Where is my husband? Where are my assets?' Michal told Euronews. "To be honest, we know our neighbour. For Putin, it's all about being in power.' He said the threat to Europe posed by Russia will remain so long as Putin is in the Kremlin. "We understand Putin and until the regime and Putin changes his goals, until then Russia is an acute threat to Europe, to NATO, to all the civilised world," he explained. Estonia's defence expenditure at over 5% of GDP is one of the highest in NATO, something Michal says is necessary, even if at times it has been unpopular. 'We cut spending, we are borrowing and we also raise taxes. To be honest, not everything in that order are not so popular in Estonia,' he said, adding that democracies need to be protected against neighbouring authoritarian regimes. It's this preparation which ensures the country is 'prepared' for any designs Putin has beyond his territorial ambitions in Ukraine. It comes at a time when all NATO members, except for Spain, have pledged to raise defence spending to 5% of GDP , in line with a demand from US President Donald Trump. Estonia takes on Russian influence Estonia still has a large Russian minority living in the country. However, the government has been vigilant in countering Russian influence by trying to eliminate the language from schools. "With the language we are the same we have this kind of reform going to Estonian schooling. And I would say that it should have been done 20 or 30 years ago, but we're doing it right now. There are small debates, but nothing major," Michal said. Russian citizens are also not allowed to vote in local elections, as Estonia hopes to send a powerful message to its neighbour. Michal is clear on the issue: "If you want to participate in the local matters, it's quite obvious you should be a citizen of that state." Cyber frontlines Estonia was also the first country to suffer a cyberattack from Russia back in 2007. "From stateside criminal players and for us, the only way to cope with Russia's kind of influence hybrid attacks and cyber-attacks is to increase our cyber capabilities. We have this kind of system also that the public sector is working with private sector in Estonia, but Russia has not decreased its attacks against us," Michal said.