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It’s happening again, and this time, it’s Romania’s turn to redraw the lines.
George Simion, a man once sidelined, smeared, and snubbed by EU loyalists, has stormed the first round of Romania’s do-over presidential election with over 40% of the vote, annihilating the globalist coalition’s preferred candidate and leaving the centrist mayor of Bucharest, Nicusor Dan, trailing in a distant second.
The result was so decisive that Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu, the regime’s standard-bearer, is stepping down. The coalition is in shambles. Their media machine failed. Their polling failed. Their manipulations failed. The people spoke, and they roared.
“Victory for Romanian dignity,” Simion said. “Despite the obstacles, despite the manipulation, despite a press paid to demean us day after day, Romanians have stood up.”
This isn’t merely a protest vote. It’s the second time Romanians have voted against the Atlanticist status quo. The first was in November, when nationalist Calin Georgescu stunned the elite by winning the first round — only to be banned from the runoff by the Constitutional Court on fabricated “Russian interference” charges. Days later, he was arrested and gagged — banned from media, forbidden from speaking on social platforms, and hit with politically motivated charges about incitement and “constitutional threats.”
Translation: He told the truth about NATO, the EU, and the US war economy, and the system moved to crush him.
But the machine miscalculated. You can jail a man, but not the movement behind him. Now Simion, a fiery nationalist and outspoken defender of Romanian sovereignty, is channeling that energy and he’s winning.
Unlike the cartoonish labels hurled from Brussels, Simion is not calling to exit NATO or the EU. But he is demanding that Romania’s interests come first. He’s called the US missile base in Deveselu “a shame of diplomacy.” He’s opposed to further entanglement in Ukraine’s endless war, and he views the current posture of blind obedience to NATO as self-defeating for Romania.
And let’s not pretend he’s “pro-Russian.” He isn’t. He’s anti-vassalage. He recognizes Romania’s geographical and historical reality — wedged between great powers, always used, rarely respected and he’s done waiting for Brussels to treat Romanians as anything but pliable subjects.
His support base is not driven by ideology, but by betrayal fatigue. Corruption, economic stagnation, subservience to Western arms industries, censorship, Romanians have seen enough.
Simion’s rise also comes in tandem with a regional pattern: Hungary’s Orban, Slovakia’s Fico, and now possibly Romania’s Simion, a new axis of Eastern European realism challenging the failed globalist consensus.
And it terrifies the Atlanticists.
Markets reacted instantly. Romanian bonds tumbled. The Euro wobbled. The Western capital class is panicking, not because Simion will start wars, but because he might finally refuse to fight theirs.
Simion heads into the May 18 runoff against Nicusor Dan, a technocrat with soft hands, soft speech, and a soft allegiance to the old order. But Simion now controls the narrative. Even the voters of other right-leaning parties are flocking to him. Betting markets have already moved: Simion’s odds have jumped to 69%.
If elected, he’s vowed to find a place for Calin Georgescu in government, a symbolic act of resurrection for the silenced nationalist who was denied his rightful shot at the presidency.
This is more than an election. This is the Romanian spirit clawing its way out of the dungeon.
And unlike the sterile speeches from Brussels or Washington, the cry coming from Bucharest isn’t about diversity metrics or IMF compliance.
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