Alliance for the Union of Romanians
Alliance for the Union of Romanians Alianța pentru Unirea Românilor | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | AUR |
President | George Simion |
General Secretary | Cristian David |
President of the Senate of AUR in Romania | Sorin Lavric |
President of the CNC and leader in the Senate of Romania | Claudiu Târziu |
Leader in the Chamber of Deputies | Antonio Andrușceac |
Party Leader in Moldova | Boris Volosatîi |
Vice-President | Marius Lulea |
Founders | |
Founded | 19 September 2019 (Romania) 27 March 2021 (Moldova) |
Youth wing | Tineret AUR (TAUR) |
Charity and workers wing | Frăția Ortodoxă[1] (2019–2022) |
Ideology | |
Political position | Right-wing to far-right |
Religion | Romanian Orthodox Church |
National affiliation | AUR Alliance |
European Parliament group | European Conservatives and Reformists |
Colours | Gold |
Slogan | Dreptate pentru România ('Justice for Romania') |
Senate | 13 / 136 |
Chamber of Deputies | 31 / 330 [a] |
European Parliament | 5 / 33 |
Mayors (Romania) | 30 / 3,176 |
County Councilors (Romania) | 159 / 1,340 |
Local Council Councilors (Romania) | 3,527 / 39,900 |
Parliament of Moldova | 0 / 101 |
District Presidents (Moldova) | 0 / 32 |
Party flag | |
Website | |
partidulaur.ro partidulaur.md (defunct) | |
The Alliance for the Union of Romanians (Romanian: Alianța pentru Unirea Românilor, AUR, meaning "gold" in Romanian)[26] is a right-wing populist[9][10] and nationalist[27][5][28] political party active in Romania and Moldova. It was founded on 19 September 2019 ahead of the 2020 Romanian local and legislative elections. The party president is George Simion. The party ran in the local elections, not obtaining many votes and only winning in three towns. However, in the legislative elections, the AUR won 9% of the votes in all of Romania and its diaspora, thus becoming the fourth-largest party in the country at the central level, which surprised observers.
AUR aims for the unification of all Romanians from Romania and Romanian-populated neighbouring zones, and for the support of the Romanian diaspora in other countries. The party seeks the unification of Moldova and Romania, supports NATO membership and aims for energy independence for Romania. It claims it is a centre-right,[29] patriotic,[30] and Christian democratic party.[31] It has been described as supporting anti-vaccination ideas and being Magyarophobic,[32][33][10] neo-fascist,[34][35] pro-Russian,[36][37][38][39] and antisemitic;[22][24][40][41] relevant figures of the party have rejected all these characterizations.[42][43][44] The party states that its four main pillars are "family, nation, Christian faith, and liberty". The party has been described as being right-wing,[45][46][47] as well as far-right.[26][48][49]
History
[edit]The Alliance for the Union of Romanians was formally established on 19 September 2019.[50] Later, during the Great Union Day of Romania on 1 December 2019, its leader, George Simion, said the party's aims were to participate in the 2020 Romanian local and legislative elections of the country.[51] Simion had up to this point been a campaigner for the unification of Romania and the Republic of Moldova.[10] Claudiu Târziu, who was co-president of the party along Simion until 27 March 2022,[52] was a member of Coalition for the Family which unsuccessfully campaigned to ban gay marriage through constitutional change in a 2018 referendum.[53][54]
On 26 June 2020, AUR condemned the disinterest of the Romanian authorities regarding the minority rights of the Romanians in Serbia and Ukraine and declared that it would fully support them once it entered the Romanian Parliament.[55] Two days later, AUR also condemned the 80th anniversary of the annexation of Bessarabia, Northern Bukovina, and the Hertsa region by the Soviet Union, declaring that "it is our obligation to regain our state".[56] By July 2020, AUR counted 22 branches in Europe and North America for the Romanian diaspora.[57] The first of these was established in Wolverhampton, in the United Kingdom.[58] AUR was the only party in Romania that expressed support for Donald Trump in the 2020 United States presidential election.[59]
2020 Romanian local elections
[edit]During the 2020 Romanian local elections, AUR won the mayoralty in three towns: Amara, Pufești, and Valea Lungă.[60]
2020 Romanian legislative election
[edit]In the 2020 Romanian legislative election, AUR obtained a high percentage of the votes, being called as the "surprise" of Romania. The results also increased the popularity of the party on the Internet.[10][61][62] The party came first among Romanians in Italy, the largest group of the Romanian diaspora, and ran a close second among Romanians in France and Romanians in Spain. It also scored first in Cyprus.[63] AUR's candidate for prime minister was Călin Georgescu, who worked for the United Nations for 17 years.[64] According to a statement released by AUR, between 7 and 8 December 2020, 15,000 Romanians joined the party in just 24 hours. The party is supposedly to have 46 members of parliament in the 2020–2024 Romanian legislature, according to the same statement.[65]
The party achieved good results in rural areas of Moldavia and Dobruja, areas traditionally dominated by the other big parties. Its most significant percentages were in the counties where the Romanian Orthodox Church has a strong influence and a large number of practicing believers. These are Suceava (14.72%), Botoșani (14.62%), Neamț (14.4%), Constanța (14.2%), and Vrancea (13.43%).[66] The party speculated the new communication channels (social networks) in a similar way to the Greater Romania Party (PRM) of the late 1990s - early 2000s, which used the newspaper "România Mare" (Greater Romania) as a communication channel, reaching high electoral scores. Another example is the People's Party – Dan Diaconescu (PP-DD), which was propelled with the help of the OTV television channel.[66]
Recorder, a Romanian online publisher, argues that the election campaign of AUR has adapted to the rural environment, which lacks modern technology, relying more on messages desired by the masses than on a coherent ideology. In this way, they argue, in addition to a core of supporters who voted for radical messages, there is also the wider category of electorate strictly attracted by populist messages.[66]
December 2020–present
[edit]On 22 January 2021, Simion announced that the party would officially adhere at European level to the "European Conservatives and Reformists Party" after going on visits in Poland and Brussels, Belgium.[67] Simion announced on 15 March 2021 that the AUR had intentions to start operating in the Republic of Moldova on the occasion of the Day of the Union of Bessarabia with Romania celebrated every 27 March.[68] The party was officially launched, as previously stated, on 27 March 2021, and the elected president of the party was Vlad Bilețchi, a renowned Moldovan unionist.[69] This new section of the AUR in Moldova later participated in the Moldovan snap parliamentary elections of 11 July 2021.[70]
On 2 October 2021, AUR organised a 15,000–20,000 people-strong protest against COVID-19 restrictions at the Victory Square in Bucharest, drawing both national and international attention and being the most attended protest in Romania since the start of the pandemic.[71][72] On 5 October 2021, a motion of no confidence initiated by AUR, but legally proposed by PSD, was passed with 281 votes, thus dismissing the Cîțu Cabinet.[73]
On 27 March 2022, AUR held its first party congress at the Palace of the Parliament. On it, it was intended to elect the party's president. There were two candidates, Simion and Dănuț Aelenei, AUR deputy in the Constanța County. Aelenei claimed to have nominated himself with the simple intention of showing that AUR was a democratic party and that he did not intend to "expel" Simion from the party, admitting that he was less well-known compared to him. 784 voted for Simion and 38 for Aelenei, making Simion the party's sole president after having previously shared leadership with Târziu, who became president of the party's CNC.[52] In November 2022, Simion met with Israel's ambassador to Romania, Reuven Azar. The encounter drew outrage from some Israelis and diaspora Jews, as AUR is officially boycotted by Israel due to its history of antisemitism.[74][75]
On 14 November 2023, at an AUR press conference, Lidia Vadim Tudor (the daughter of the late Corneliu Vadim Tudor), former Minister for Business Environment Ilan Laufer (who is also the president of the National Identity Force), businessman Muhammad Murad, entrepreneur Sorin Constantinescu and Sorin Ilieșiu, as well as deputies Florică Calotă (who was elected on PNL list), Daniel Forea (elected on PSD list), Dumitru Viorel Focșa (elected on AUR, but later left) and senators Ovidiu Iosif Florean (elected on PNL list), Călin Gheorghe Matieș (elected on PSD list) and Vasilică Potecă (elected on PNL list) announced that they are joining AUR for the next election.[76] Later, on 21 November, AUR announced, together with the Romanian Village Party, National Rebirth Alliance, Romanian Republican Party and National Peasants' Alliance the creation of a Sovereigntist Alliance to contest the 2024 Romanian parliamentary election.[77][78]
After the 2024 European Parliament Election, AUR gained 5 seats in the EU Parliament, with a total of 6 seats, receiving 14.9% of the total votes, ranking 2nd behind the CNR.[79] AUR previously held only 1 seat in the European Parliament.[80] After the 2024 Romanian Local Elections, they are also expected to win some seats in county and local councils; however, not all votes have been counted nationally as of June 12, 2024, with results only available in some counties.
Ideology
[edit]AUR is young as a party, but it didn't come out of nowhere. It brings together some people whose history is linked to the late period of communism. Its candidates are experts in propaganda, intellectuals with more or less open sympathy for legionnaires and legionary or pro-legionary intellectuals, businessmen and itinerant politicians who wander from one radical party to another.
According to the party's website, AUR's ultimate goal is to achieve the unification of all Romanians "wherever they are located, in Bucharest, Iași, Timișoara, Cernăuți, Timoc, Voivodina, Italy, or Spain", while wanting to unite Romania and Moldova together, as well as land with Romanian speakers in neighboring countries.[82] The website names four pillars for the party: family, nation, Christian faith, and liberty.[46][54] The party characterizes its members as "the defenders of the Church".[59] It is opposed to "gender ideology" and believes that a nation has no chance of surviving "unless it cultivates the original pattern of the classic family".[47]
The party's representatives became popular on social media as a result of their positioning against measures taken by the government during the COVID-19 pandemic. Leading members, such as Șoșoacă (later expelled), gained thousands of followers. AUR has been described as supporting "anti-medicine, anti-vaccination" rhetoric.[54] This accusation was rejected by George Simion, president of AUR, claiming that the party supports the "freedom of choice".[83] The party's manifesto opposes secularism and condemns atheism, and claims that Christians are persecuted in Romania.[48] The party has been critical of the impact of the local autonomy of Hungarians in Romania on the rights of ethnic Romanians in the centre of the country (where the Hungarians are the majority),[47] leading to accusations of being Magyarophobic.[10] The latter accusation was rejected by the president of AUR,[84] and the party denounced the media, accusing media outlets of spreading false information about its campaign.[citation needed] Simion has cited Law and Justice and Fidesz, the ruling parties in Poland and Hungary respectively, as some of his models.[85][86] Despite this, AUR has also expressed deep criticism of Fidesz, stating that it would not join the same group in the European Parliament as Fidesz, due to its claims on Romanian territory.[87] However, AUR later reversed its stance, expressing openness to Fidesz joining the European Conservatives and Reformists.[88]
AUR wishes to position Romania as a leader in central and eastern Europe within the European Union and to integrate the Republic of Moldova into Romania,[5][6][89] whilst also being eurosceptic[6][90] The party is pro-NATO and views the integration of Moldova into Romania as strengthening NATO's eastern flank.[47] The party also takes a strongly pro-Israel stance, supporting Israeli settlements in the West Bank.[91] It supports the Serbian stance on the political status of Kosovo, considering Kosovo to be part of Serbia.[92] By 2023, the party had become critical of Romanian military support for Ukraine in the Russo-Ukrainian War, suggesting that the war is "not ours". AUR also criticised the transit of Ukrainian agricultural products through Romania, and Simion has been banned from entering Ukraine.[93] Nevertheless, the party leadership is critical of relations with Russia, with Simion calling for the expulsion of the Russian Ambassador and closing Russian consulates in Romania following Russian threats against Romania in December 2023.[94] Simion has called for Western nations to "stop exporting wars", suggesting that the downfall of the "strong Syrian state" during the Syrian Civil War had increased illegal immigration.[95]
AUR wishes to ensure Romania's self-sufficiency in energy, the prosecution of those deemed responsible for mismanaged post-Communist privatisation projects, and a fight against illegal logging by banning the export of non-processed wood.[85] Additionally, AUR wishes to reform and modernize the education system, with a focus on reducing the overhead of political administration in order to improve the quality and the availability of education in Romania.[citation needed] The party has a senate, which is equivalent to the National Executive Committee of other Romanian parties such as the PSD, the National Liberal Party (PNL), and the Save Romania Union (USR).[96]
Leadership
[edit]Nº | Name Born - Died |
Portrait | Term start | Term end | Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | George Simion (1986– ) |
1 December 2019 | 27 March 2022 | 2 years, 3 months and 26 days | |
Claudiu Târziu (1973– |
1 December 2019 | 27 March 2022 | |||
(1) | George Simion (1986– |
27 March 2022 | Incumbent | 2 years, 7 months and 5 days |
Electoral history
[edit]Romania
[edit]Legislative elections
[edit]Election | Chamber | Senate | Position | Aftermath | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | |||
20201 | 535,828 | 9.08 | 33 / 330
|
541,935 | 9.17 | 14 / 136
|
4th | Opposition to PNL-USR PLUS-UDMR government (2020–2021) |
Opposition to PNL-UDMR minority government (2021) | ||||||||
Opposition to CNR government (2021–present) | ||||||||
2024 | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD |
Notes:
1 1 senator and 4 deputies from NR were elected on AUR's list[97]
Local elections
[edit]National results
[edit]Election | County Councilors (CJ) | Mayors | Local Councilors (CL) | Popular vote | % | Position | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | ||||
2020 | 71,022 | 0.99 | 0 / 1,340
|
26,596 | 0.33 | 3 / 3,176
|
35,797 | 0.45 | 79 / 39,900
|
71,022 | 0.99 | 12th |
2024 | — | — | 0 / 1,340
|
— | — | 1,898 / 11,386
|
829,365 | 9.53 | 3,527 / 39,739
|
— | — | 3rd (within AUR Alliance) |
Mayor of Bucharest
[edit]Election | Candidate | First round | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | Percentage | Position | ||
2020 | Claudiu Târziu | 4,445 | 7th | |
2024[98] | Mihai Enache | 22,209 | 5th |
Presidential elections
[edit]Election | Candidate | First round | Second round | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | Percentage | Position | Votes | Percentage | Position | ||
2024 | George Simion | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD |
European Parliament elections
[edit]Election | Votes | % | MEPs | Position | EU Party | EP Group |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 1,334,905 | 14.93 | 5 / 33
|
2nd (within AUR Alliance)1 |
ECR | ECR |
Note:
1 AUR Alliance members: AUR (5 MEPs), PNRC (1 MEP) and the other party members did not achieved any mandates (ARN, PRR and BUN).
AUR (Republic of Moldova)
[edit]Legislative elections
[edit]Election | Parliament | Position | Aftermath | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | |||
2021 | 7,216 | 0.49 | 0 / 101
|
10th | Extra-parliamentary |
See also
[edit]- Romanian Nationhood Party
- List of political parties in Romania
- Politics of Moldova
- Politics of Romania
References
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But according to a top new MEP in AUR, which now has six seats in the European Parliament and joined the ECR last week, Orbán is still welcome in the group. "We've always advocated for a big group," Claudiu Târziu told Playbook's Nick Vinocur, adding that the problem was a lack of communication with Fidesz.
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Further reading
[edit]- Biliuță, Ionuț (2021). "Constructing Fascist Hagiographies: The Genealogy of the Prison Saints Movement in Contemporary Romania". Contemporary European History. 31 (3): 435–455. doi:10.1017/S0960777321000424. ISSN 0960-7773. S2CID 244011991.
- Lay summary in: Ionuț Biliuță (3 December 2021). "Constructing Fascist Hagiographies: The Genealogy of the Prison Saints Movement in Contemporary Romania". Cambridge Core.
External links
[edit]- Official website (in Romanian)
- English language version
- Official website of the Moldovan branch (in Romanian; now defunct)
- Alliance for the Union of Romanians
- 2019 establishments in Romania
- Political parties established in 2019
- 2021 establishments in Moldova
- Political parties established in 2021
- Conservative parties in Romania
- Conservative parties in Moldova
- Eastern Orthodox political parties
- Nationalist parties in Romania
- National conservative parties
- Romanian nationalist parties
- Right-wing populist parties
- Right-wing parties in Romania
- Anti-immigration politics in Europe
- Far-right political parties in Romania
- Anti-communist parties
- Right-wing populism in Romania
- Economic nationalism
- Social conservative parties
- Anti-globalization political parties
- Paleoconservative organizations
- European Conservatives and Reformists Party member parties
- Criticism of feminism
- Paleoconservatism
- Eastern Orthodoxy and far-right politics
- Anti-communism in Romania
- Anti-corruption activism
- Eurosceptic parties in Romania
- Criticism of multiculturalism
- Anti-globalization movement
- Anti-imperialism in Europe
- Greater Romania
- Opposition to same-sex marriage in Europe
- Romanian irredentism
- Natalism
- Romanian nationalism in Moldova
- Opposition to Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
- Organizations that oppose LGBTQ rights in Romania
- Organizations that oppose LGBTQ rights in Europe
- Christian fundamentalist organizations in Europe
- Anti-abortion organizations
- Christian nationalism in Europe
- Anti-LGBTQ Christian organizations
- Anti-LGBTQ sentiment in Europe