The winning by Călin Georgescu of the first place in the first round of the presidential elections can be considered a true sovereignist revolution of the Romanians, with major implications including on the political map of Europe.
Romania, underestimated at the moment due to its own incoherent and spineless policies, is nevertheless, naturally, the second largest country in the East after Poland and a very important NATO barrier against Russian expansion.
As a result, in the eventuality of extending this victory to the end, the EU will have to adjust its misguided policies that trample on the interests of its constituent nations and be very attentive to what the European East wants as well.
Seen this way, Romania can once again become, as in the interwar period, a true capital of the Balkans and Eastern Europe.
The second round is coming, which will give birth to new internal political alliances that will prepare for the final battle but also for the peace that will follow.
Those who today consider themselves the pole of the right cannot vote for the left without compromising themselves.
Will they be neutral or will they opt for the candidate that appeared overnight who, anyway, is not from the left?
Sovereigns in AUR will have to vote for the sovereignist creed.
And they represent almost 20% of voters.
The PSD candidate had behind him the largest, most powerful ruling party with immense financial resources.
But after the “huge performance” of coming out behind an almost unknown, without a party and without resources, Ciolacu is extremely vulnerable in the bosom of his own party and feels that he is about to be disembarked.
The PSD is already shivering and will start a dirty and desperate campaign against the independent candidate.
Călin Georgescu came alone, out of nowhere promoting the sovereignist current that is sweeping the world today, from the United States to EU countries.
After years of “wise politics” of knee-jerk acceptance of globalist policies that led, among other things, to depopulation of the country, Romanians today dare to stand up to elect a President who promises to say NO to these policies.
He does not demand Romania’s exit from NATO, he does not demand Romania’s exit from the EU.
He wants the EU to also take into account the interests of the Eastern EU, not just impose the interests of the Western EU.
He wants honest renegotiations between equal partners, not economic and ideological dictates.
Perhaps a new historic chance has come for Romania that our nation should take advantage of.
Mircea Popescu
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Source: www.cotidianul.ro