In Moldova, the party of Berlin's favorite, the country's neoliberal president, Maia Sandu, won Sunday's parliamentary election. According to the preliminary election results, the EU-oriented Action and Solidarity Party (PAS) was able to prevail with around 52 percent against the Socialists around ex-president Igor Dodon, who are more inclined towards Russia. Berlin had openly intervened in the election campaign: PAS ex-leader Sandu, who remains its best-known representative, had been received in the German capital by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, among others; German support for her and her party recently even included media publications aimed at influencing public opinion in the southeastern European country. Sandu and the PAS have been supported by the German government and German foundations for years – with the aim of gaining the upper hand in Moldova in the power struggle against Russia. In the steady battle, Sandu's pro-EU group now provides the president as well as the largest faction in parliament.
Compromise of the Great Powers
After a fierce state crisis in the summer of 2019, in which there had been two parallel governments in the interim, the pro-Russia Socialists (PSRM) and the pro-EU Liberal Conservatives formed a joint government – mediated by ambassadors from outside powers.[1] Former World Bank employee Maia Sandu received the post of prime minister in Chisinău. One of her few trips abroad took her to Germany, where she met Chancellor Angela Merkel (CDU) and visited the CDU-affiliated Konrad Adenauer Foundation, among others.[2] Merkel stated that Berlin wholeheartedly supported the "reforms" envisioned by Sandu.[3] However, after losing a confidence vote, Sandu resigned as early as November 2019; she stated that there was "a great risk" that "Moldova will now lose the support of international donors again".[4]
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