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2024 Moldovan European Union membership referendum

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2024 Moldovan European Union membership referendum

20 October 2024

Do you support the amendment of the Constitution with a view to the accession of the Republic of Moldova to the European Union?
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 749,719 50.35%
No 739,155 49.65%
Valid votes 1,488,874 97.22%
Invalid or blank votes 42,518 2.78%
Total votes 1,531,392 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 3,020,814 50.69%

Results by first-level administrative divisions, sectors of Chișinău and abroad
Yes:      50–55%      55–60%      60–65%      65–70%      75–80%
No:      50–55%      55–60%      60–65%      65–70%      70–75%      75–80%      90–95%

A nationwide constitutional referendum was held in Moldova on 20 October 2024[1] on whether the country should amend the Constitution of Moldova to include the Moldovan citizens' wish for European Union membership,[2] in order to make it harder for future governments to shift the country away from its pro-European trajectory.[3][4] The referendum occurred on the same day as the first round of the 2024 Moldovan presidential election. The proposal was approved and the constitution amended.

Incumbent president Maia Sandu campaigned for the "yes" side in the referendum.[4] A narrow majority of votes were in favour of Moldova's EU aspirations, though the referendum was described as closer than expected. The voter turnout of 50% exceeded the 33.33% requirement for the referendum to be considered binding. Earlier, Sandu had told Moldovans that there was "clear evidence" that criminal groups backed by "foreign forces hostile to our national interests" had aimed to buy off 300,000 votes.[5] The European Union meanwhile welcomed the results and condemned the "unprecedented malign interference by Russia".[6]

Background

In March 2022, following Russia's invasion of neighboring Ukraine, Moldova submitted an application for EU membership.[7] That June Moldova was granted the status of a candidate country by the European Council.[8] In December 2023, the European Council announced its decision to open accession negotiations with Moldova.[9] Moldova set a target date of 2030 for EU accession.[10]

President Sandu had announced her intention to seek re-election in 2023.[3] Sandu also announced the launch of an online platform aimed at promoting the referendum and advocating for the benefits of EU membership to the country.[3] Observers noted she is gearing up to focus her efforts on EU integration, an area where she and her party PAS have experienced consistent success in order to be re-elected.[11]

In March 2024, Sandu expressed her hope that the referendum would coincide with the presidential elections scheduled for the autumn. Sandu said; "It is important to hold a referendum now because it is a historic occasion, awaited for three decades. The European Union member states are more open than ever, we have the necessary political will for this step, and our citizens want to be part of the EU."[3]

On 21 March 2024, the Parliament of Moldova endorsed a resolution of 54-to-0 to continue the efforts to join the European Union. The declaration asserted, "Only joining Europe can ensure the future of the country as a sovereign, neutral, and fully democratic state". During the vote, all opposition parties in parliament walked out.[12] On 16 May, Parliament approved the holding of the referendum in conjunction with the presidential election on 20 October.[13][14]

Gagauzia

On 2 February 2014, the Autonomous Territorial Unit of Gagauzia held two referendums on European integration. In one, 98.4% voted in favour of joining the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia, while in the second 97.2% opposed further integration with the EU. 98.9% of voters also supported the proposition that Gagauzia could declare independence if Moldova unified with Romania.[15] There is concern in Gagauzia that Moldova's integration with the EU could lead to such a unification with EU member Romania, which is unpopular in the autonomous region.[16]

Question

The Romanian-language voting ballot for the referendum. There were also ballots in Russian, Gagauz, Bulgarian, Romani and Ukrainian.

The text of the question put to the vote was:[17]

Susțineți modificarea Constituției în vederea aderării Republicii Moldova la Uniunea Europeană?

(Do you support the amendment of the Constitution with a view to the accession of the Republic of Moldova to the European Union?)

The options of the vote were "yes" (Romanian: da) and "no" (Romanian: nu).[17]

Campaign

At a meeting in Moscow on 21 April 2024, five opposition parties, namely the banned Șor Party, the Revival Party, Chance, Victorie and the Alternative Force for Saving Moldova, announced the formation of an alliance called Victory to oppose EU membership and seek closer relations with Russia. The leader of Gagauzia, Evghenia Guțul, also expressed support for the movement, which revolves around Șor Party leader, oligarch, and convicted fraudster and money launderer Ilan Shor. Moldovan Infrastructure Minister Andrei Spînu called the members of the coalition "traitors" and suggested that it had been formed "right next to the Kremlin".[18]

Moldovan authorities have accused Russian-trained groups of plotting to destabilise the exercise. In September 2024, incidents of vandalism on the offices of the Supreme Court of Justice of Moldova and on the public broadcaster Teleradio-Moldova were attributed to the said groups.[19] In October 2024, authorities announced on social media the discovery of a plot by Ilan Shor involving vote bribery and anti-European Union propaganda, following raids on 26 locations nationwide.[20][21] Russia denied the accusations.[22]

Security checks were strengthened at Chișinău International Airport following an influx of passengers from Russia carrying large amounts of cash believed to be connected with the plot.[23] On the day of the referendum, the BBC reported that their producer overheard a voter asking an election monitor where she would get paid for her vote, and after being questioned by the network on the issue, she admitted to have been offered 1,000  to vote for a candidate and option in the referendum which she did not want to disclose, money which she did not end up receiving.[24][25]

In mid-October, Moldova accused Russia of plotting to bus in voters to polling stations at the Moldovan Embassy in Moscow. In response, the EU imposed sanctions on five people and one entity involved in the influence operation, while the United States accused Russia of spending "millions of dollars" to support its preferred parties and spreading disinformation online. The Russian foreign ministry in turn accused Moldova of printing only 10,000 ballots for 500,000 eligible Moldovans living in Russia.[26]

On 17 October, Moldovan authorities announced the discovery of another plot in which 100 youths were trained in Moscow, Serbia and Bosnia by private military groups to foment civil unrest, including using nonlethal weapons to create "mass disorder" during the election and referendum, adding that four people had been arrested and that some of them received several thousand euros in payments.[27]

The European Union deployed its Cyber Rapid Response Team led by Lithuania to Moldova in order to oversee cybersecurity concerns in the election and referendum following a request from the Moldovan Information Technology and Cyber Security Service.[28]

Referendum

Voting in a polling station on 20 October

Approximately 2.8 million ballots were issued for the referendum and the presidential election. For the first time in Moldova, ballots were featured not only in Romanian but also in as many as five minority languages. Thus, 2,092,641 ballots were in Romanian, 631,979 in Russian, 3,400 in Gagauz, 991 in Bulgarian, 870 in the Romani language and 115 in Ukrainian. For voters in the pro-Russian separatist region of Transnistria, 90,000 ballots were issued, of which 45,000 were in Romanian and the rest in Russian.[29] Voting was held from 07:00 to 21:00.[30]

For the referendum and the election, 234 polling stations were opened abroad. The first vote in both was cast by Ludmila Vizdoagă, a woman who at the time had lived in South Korea for 19 years. She traveled from Seoul to Tokyo to vote in the polling station for Japan, which was the first to be opened.[29] A polling station was also set up in Varnița to serve voters from Transnistria.[30] There were more than 50 polling stations in Italy, 17 in the United States, and two in Russia (both in Moscow).[31]

The referendum was boycotted by several Moldovan political figures, including Party of Socialists of the Republic of Moldova (PSRM) presidential candidate Alexandr Stoianoglo,[32] Our Party (PN) candidate Renato Usatîi[33] and PSRM leader and former president Igor Dodon.[34]

Registered political parties

The Central Electoral Commission of Moldova registered the parties that took part in the referendum campaign. Of the 15 parties officially registered by 20 September, 13 were in favor of the YES option and two were in favor of the NO option. Some parties such as the PSRM or the Party of Development and Consolidation of Moldova (PDCM) boycotted the referendum.[35]

Choice Parties Political orientation Leader Ref
checkY Yes Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) Liberalism Igor Grosu [36]
National Alternative Movement (MAN) Social democracy Ion Ceban [36]
European Social Democratic Party (PSDE) Social democracy Ion Sula [36]
Together Bloc (Împreună)[a] Liberalism Octavian Țîcu [36]
Ecologist Green Party (PV) Green politics Anatolie Prohnițchi [36]
Respect Moldova Movement (MRM) Social conservatism Eugeniu Nichiforciuc [36]
Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) Social liberalism Arina Spătaru [36]
Coalition for Unity and Welfare (CUB) Liberalism Igor Munteanu [36]
Democracy at Home Party (PPDA) Populism Vasile Costiuc [36]
Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) Romanian nationalism Boris Volosatîi [36]
We Political Party (NOI) Social democracy Vladimir Dachi [36]
Party of National Reunification "Acasă" (PRN) Moldovan–Romanian unionism Valentin Dolganiuc [36]
Popular Will Party (PVP) Conservatism Nicolae Gîrbu [36]
Liberal Democratic Party of Moldova (PLDM) (excluded from campaign) Conservatism Vladimir Filat [37]
Liberal Party (PL) (excluded from campaign) Conservative liberalism Dorin Chirtoacă [38]
National Liberal Party (PNL) (excluded from campaign) National liberalism Mihai Severovan [39]
☒N No Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova (PCRM) Communism Vladimir Voronin [36]
Revival Party (PR) Russophilia Natalia Parasca [36]
Chance (PȘ) (excluded from campaign) Euroscepticism Alexei Lungu [35]
Gray X symbolNg Boycott Party of Socialists of the Republic of Moldova (PSRM) Democratic socialism Igor Dodon [35]
Party of Development and Consolidation (PDCM) Christian democracy Ion Chicu [35]
Neutral position Our Party (PN)[b] Populism Renato Usatîi [35]

Opinion polls

Fieldwork
date
Polling firm/
Commissioner
Sample size Yes No None/
Undecided/
Abstention
11–16 Oct 2024 CBS Research–WatchDog[40] 1,034 55.1% 34.5% 10.3%
13–15 Oct 2024 Intellect Group[41] 985 44% 31% 25%
19 Sep – 10 Oct 2024 iData–IPP[42] 1,100 47.9% 23% 29.1%

Results

The outcome of the referendum was described as a closer result than what opinion polls had predicted,[2] amidst allegations of vote buying made against the side opposed to the constitutional change.

ChoiceVotes%
For749,71950.35
Against739,15549.65
Total1,488,874100.00
Valid votes1,488,87497.22
Invalid/blank votes42,5182.78
Total votes1,531,392100.00
Registered voters/turnout3,020,81450.69
Source: CEC, sudd.ch

Regional results

Region[43] Valid votes Yes Yes (%) No No (%)
Anenii Noi 29,347 14,336 48.85% 15,011 51.15%
Bălți 49,046 14,430 29.42% 34,616 70.58%
Basarabeasca 8,386 3,075 36.67% 5,311 63.33%
Briceni 22,768 6,518 28.63% 16,250 71.37%
Cahul 38,419 16,830 43.81% 21,589 56.19%
Cantemir 17,101 9,129 53.38% 7,972 46.62%
Călărași 22,925 13,860 60.46% 9,065 39.54%
Căușeni 27,868 13,928 49.98% 13,940 50.02%
Chișinău 348,707 195,227 56.00% 153,430 44.00%
Cimișlia 18,100 9,033 49.91% 9,067 50.09%
Criuleni 27,332 16,453 60.20% 10,879 39.80%
Dondușeni 13,852 3,762 27.16% 10,090 72.84%
Drochia 28,348 9,275 32.72% 19,073 67.28%
Dubăsari 11,735 4,818 41.06% 6,917 58.94%
Edineț 26,083 7,758 29.74% 18,325 70.26%
Fălești 30,570 10,239 33.49% 20,331 66.51%
Florești 29,035 10,917 37.60% 18,118 62.40%
Găgăuzia 57,847 2,985 5.16% 54,862 94.84%
Glodeni 18,659 6,293 33.73% 12,366 66.27%
Hîncești 35,665 20,992 58.86% 14,673 41.14%
Ialoveni 38,480 26,050 67.70% 12,430 32.30%
Left Bank of the Dniester 15,526 4,816 31.02% 10,710 68.98%
Leova 15,782 7,769 49.23% 8,013 50.77%
Nisporeni 19,787 11,889 60.08% 7,898 39.92%
Ocnița 17,224 3,627 21.06% 13,597 78.94%
Orhei 42,508 19,760 46.49% 22,748 53.51%
Rezina 16,151 7,888 48.84% 8,263 51.16%
Rîșcani 22,180 7,123 32.11% 15,057 67.89%
Sîngerei 28,003 11,244 40.15% 16,759 59.85%
Soroca 32,621 12,415 38.06% 20,206 61.94%
Strășeni 32,105 20,023 62.37% 12,082 37.63%
Șoldănești 13,322 5,661 42.49% 7,661 57.51%
Ștefan Vodă 22,104 10,567 47.81% 11,537 52.19%
Taraclia 15,799 1,258 7.96% 14,541 92.04%
Telenești 22,167 12,693 57.26% 9,474 42.74%
Ungheni 37,819 16,355 43.25% 21,464 56.75%
Votes from abroad 235,503 180,836 76.79% 54,667 23.21%
Total 1,488,874 749,719 50.35% 739,155 49.65%

Aftermath

Analysts said ballots from the largely pro-EU diaspora were counted towards the end, giving the "yes" campaign a last-moment push.[5][31] The "yes" option was selected by 45.38% of voters living in Moldova and 76.96% of Moldovan citizens living or being placed abroad.

Instances of vote buying

President Sandu attributed the close result of the referendum to foreign interference and described it as an "unprecedented assault on democracy", adding that her government had evidence that 150,000 votes had been bought, with a goal by criminal entities of 300,000 votes.[44] The European Union also said that the two exercises had taken place "under unprecedented interference and intimidation by Russia and its proxies".[25]

Earlier in the year, an investigation conducted by the newspaper Ziarul de Gardă revealed the existence of a criminal enterprise headed by Ilan Shor, which received $15 million from the Russian government (the admissions were recorded on camera); those funds were then distributed to around 130,000 people in order to bribe voters and spread disinformation against the European Union.[20][21] Russia denied the accusations.[45][46]

A BBC producer at a polling station in Transnistria found evidence of vote buying,[24] with a first-hand account of a woman asking an election monitor where she could collect the cash promised to her in exchange for her vote while refusing to tell what her vote was.[25] The election monitor Promolex also noted instances at polling stations in Russia in which voters allegedly received white jackets emblazoned with the words "Russia/Moldova" as well as invitations to restaurants and internet cards as voting benefits.[47]

Four hundred Moldovan citizens were investigated for allegedly receiving money to choose the "no" option in the referendum and vote for a determined candidate in the presidential election. Those found guilty would have been fined 37,000 Moldovan lei (over 1,900[48] or US$2,100[49] as of 2024), but were given the option of not receiving punishment if they cooperated with the authorities.[50]

The head of the Moldovan Police, Viorel Cernăuțeanu, stated on 24 October that since September, a total of $39 million, including 15 million that month and 24 million in October, had been transferred to over 138,000 people in Moldova through the Russian bank Promsvyazbank, which is banned in Moldova. He added that the number of people that had benefited from this system would be much greater as they would have received money not only for themselves but also for members of their family. This money transfer system was believed to have started in late spring, and was carried out through applications that people downloaded with instructions from interactive chatbots on Telegram. This allowed them to enter the system and benefit from transfers from the bank. Cernăuțeanu stated that Moldovan police had documented and stopped the activity of such bots in 97 Telegram groups.[51]

International reactions

The European Union welcomed the results and condemned the alleged "unprecedented malign interference by Russia".[6] European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen praised the referendum result, saying that "In the face of Russia's hybrid tactics, Moldova shows that it is independent, it is strong and it wants a European future!", while the United States also noted Russian attempts to "undermine Moldova's election and its European integration".[52] Meanwhile, the Kremlin expressed doubt on how the 'Yes' vote narrowly won and reiterated its denial of allegations of interference.[53]

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe observer team said in a statement that the constitutional referendum was well-managed and contestants campaigned freely in an environment characterized by concerns of illicit foreign interference and active disinformation efforts. While this affected the integrity of the process, campaign conditions did not allow for a level playing field among contestants, as the media coverage favoured the incumbent and the government and there was misuse of public resources. OSCE stated that "the election administration worked professionally and demonstrated impartiality in their decision-making", and special co-ordinator Lucie Potůčková praised the country "for implementing a number of reforms to increase public confidence in the electoral system, in the context of heavy Russian propaganda. From implementing cybersecurity measures to ensuring a high degree of women's participation, there is much to celebrate in this election".[54]

On 6 November, the Russian foreign ministry summoned Moldovan ambassador Lilian Darius to complain about Moldova barring eight Russian election observers from entering the country to monitor the referendum and presidential elections.[55] On 12 November, the Moldovan government served a note to the Russian ambassador Oleg Ozerov formally complaining about Moscow's interference.[56]

Domestic reactions

Former foreign minister Nicu Popescu praised the victory of the "yes" side and said that "even a marginal victory is still a victory", in the context of the narrow result in favour of EU integration.[57]

In a statement on 24 October, Sandu stated that, despite the instances of vote buying, she had rejected suggestions of annulling and repeating the elections as "no one has the right to deny citizens a massive, honest and free expression of their will". She further stated that, without the buying of votes, "we would have had a clear victory for both the presidential elections and the referendum", and also urged the Moldovan judiciary to "wake up" and address the issue of electoral bribery.[58]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Bloc consisting of the Dignity and Truth Platform, the League of Cities and Towns (LOS) and the Party of Changes [ro]
  2. ^ Although the party did not have a position, Usatîi boycotted the referendum, saying "It's my personal decision, but the citizens should do as they know".[33]

References

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