Romania's Constitutional Court has rejected a request from defeated nationalist presidential candidate George Simion to annul the result of the 18 May election. Simion alleged that the election had been subject to 'foreign interference', singling out Moldova and France. In a short statement, the Court said that it had, "unanimously, rejected the request to annul the elections as unfounded." The statement added that the Court's decision is "final".
- Simion responded on social media, claiming the Court was "continuing the coup". The leader of the right-wing Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) has claimed that vote buying was rampant among the Romanian community there, and that the French security services had encouraged messaging app Telegram to "silence" conservative voices in Romania ahead of the election.
- President-elect Nicosur Dan is set to take the presidential oath of office in front of the parliament on 26 May. Until then (and likely after) he is meeting with party leaders as he attempts to put together a workable gov't coalition. The previous administration resigned after Simion topped the first round of the presidential election.
- It remains to be seen whether the main moderate forces, the centre-left Social Democrats, centre-right National Liberal Party, Hungarian-interest Democratic Alliance of Hungarians, and liberal Save Romania Union, with a combined 198 seats in the 330-member Chamber of Deputies, can agree on a PM candidate and the formation of a gov't.
- If parliament rejects two prime ministerial candidates, snap legislative elections will be called.