Election Name: | 2009 Moldovan presidential election |
Country: | Moldova |
Type: | presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Party Colour: | no |
Previous Election: | 2005 Moldovan presidential election |
Previous Year: | 2005 |
Next Election: | November–December 2009 Moldovan presidential election |
Seats For Election: | The office of President of Moldova |
Election Date: | 20 May 2009 (first round) 3 June 2009 (second round) |
President | |
Before Election: | Vladimir Voronin |
Before Party: | PCRM |
After Election: | Election results annulled Vladimir Voronin (acting) |
After Party: | PCRM |
An indirect presidential election was held in Moldova following the April 2009 parliamentary election.
The incumbent president, Vladimir Voronin, was term-limited and was elected to become speaker of the Parliament of Moldova in early May 2009; the ruling Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova (PCRM) nominated Zinaida Greceanîi.[1] As the PCRM held only 60 of 101 seats in parliament, but 61 seats were required to elect the president, at least one dissenting vote from the opposition was required; the opposition had announced, however, that it would boycott the election, thus forcing repeated parliamentary elections.[2]
In the first round on 20 May 2009, the opposition successfully boycotted the election procedure; a second round was set for 28 May 2009.[3] On that day, the election was postponed to 3 June 2009; the PCRM claimed that it was due to Ascension Thursday falling that day, while the opposition criticised the PCRM's attempts to delay the election.[4]
On 2 June 2009, the former parliamentary speaker Marian Lupu (who had been expected to become prime minister in a musical chairs-like shift of offices among Voronin, Greceanîi and Lupu) defected to the opposition, stating that he had realised that the PCRM was undemocratic and could not be reformed from within.[5] As had been expected, the second round of the presidential elections was also unsuccessful, leading to early parliamentary elections held on 29 July 2009.[6]
In both rounds, alternative candidates were also nominated by the PCRM – Stanislav Groppa, a doctor, in the first round; and Andrei Neguţă, the Moldovan ambassador to Russia, in the second round.