News

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Romania’s constitutional court has annulled last month’s first round of presidential elections after evidence that the leading candidate benefited from Russian intervention.

The unprecedented decision to strike down the vote, which was won by far-right candidate Călin Georgescu, came after documents published this week indicated Moscow co-ordinated hybrid attacks seeking to undermine the election.

“The electoral process for the election of the President of Romania will be repeated in its entirety,” with the government to set a new date for the vote, the court said on Friday.

Georgescu’s rise in recent weeks stunned the country and its western allies.

His first-round victory came even though he had no party behind him and claimed to have spent “zero” on his campaign, which was mainly on social media.

The Romanian national security council declassified several documents on Wednesday that alleged that Russia attempted to hack into the country’s electoral infrastructure and promote Georgescu on social media platforms.

This is a developing story

Articles You May Like

How Israel erased a town of 200,000
Trump’s Treasury pick warns unwinding tax cuts would spark ‘economic calamity’
The crazy ride in quantum computing stocks continues as shares rip higher on Microsoft’s ‘quantum ready’ directive
Starmer touts relationship with Trump as he seeks US-UK trade deal
Irenic takes a position at KBR. Here’s how the activist may help improve shareholder value