Max Primorac
In his highly quoted speech to the Munich Security Conference, Vice President J.D. Vance singled out a country unfamiliar to many Americans: Romania.
Mr. Vance condemned what he described as Europe’s crackdown on free speech and mentioned Romania’s election annulment.
In December, “Romania straight up canceled the results of a presidential election based on the flimsy suspicions of an intelligence agency and enormous pressure from its continental neighbors,” he said. “The argument was that Russian disinformation had infected the Romanian elections, but I’d ask my European friends to have some perspective. If your democracy can be destroyed with a few hundred thousand dollars of digital advertising from a foreign country, then it wasn’t very strong to begin with.”
The election winner was political outsider Calin Georgescu, who shocked Europe’s elites by winning the first round of Romania’s presidential elections in November. Mr. Georgescu gained notoriety for anti-European Union, NATO-skeptical views and quirky positions such as claiming COVID-19 was a hoax. Many in the mainstream media and the European left and center right tagged him as a “far right” candidate.
Soon afterward, Romania’s Constitutional Court took the unprecedented step of annulling the elections, citing Russian interference. It was the first election annulment in Europe since the Cold War ended in 1989.
Europe Wants To Be the World’s Speech Police
This draconian decision was based on reports of a spike in pro-Georgescu TikTok ads in the weeks before election day. If Russia was involved, Romanian authorities have yet to offer proof.
Since being shut out of the elections, Mr. Georgescu has been harassed by Romanian authorities, including summary police detention and judicial proceedings. On March 9, the Central Electoral Commission barred him from running again. Now, another “far right” candidate has been banned for making declarations “contrary to democratic values.”
In sum, to save democracy, » Read More
https://www.heritage.org/europe/commentary/crossing-the-anti-democratic-rubicon-europe