The electoral campaign for the first round started on 2 October 2020 and ended on 30 October 2020. The electoral campaign for the second round started on 2 November and ended on 13 November 2020.
First round Igor Dodon Igor Dodon announced that he intended to run for reelection as an independent candidate on 9 September 2020. His stated reason for running as such was that, according to Moldovan law, the president cannot be a member of a political party. Dodon thought that running as a party's candidate could open the way for his opponents to contest the legitimacy of his participation at the
constitutional court. On 21 September 2020, he presented the necessary signatures supporting him for registration to
Central Election Commission of Moldova (CEC). The CEC declared that he would be listed fourth on the ballot if registered. Igor Dodon formally launched his campaign on 2 October 2020. Shortly after doing this, he announced that he was not going to make use of
billboards and that he would not, at least in the first round, take part in any debates. On 6 October 2020, the
Party of Socialists of the Republic of Moldova (PSRM) officially endorsed Dodon's candidacy. Widely regarded as the most
pro-Russian candidate on the ballot, Dodon advocated to codify into law the role of the Russian language, make studying Russian compulsory in schools and strengthening strategic partnership with Russia. Other key pillars of his campaign were preserving Moldova's territorial sovereignty, strengthening the social security system and promoting
Christian and
family values. After announcing the official end of his campaign for the first round on 30 October, Dodon stated that he had organized more than 240 meetings with voters in hundreds of cities and villages which allowed him to meet more than 45,000 people.
Maia Sandu Maia Sandu announced her candidacy for the 2020 presidential election on 18 July 2020. She was nominated by the
Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) as a result of a decision made by the National Political Council of the party. After running as a joint candidate of
DA and PAS in 2016, she stated that in 2020, a joint
pro-European candidate would not be needed as there was not a risk of there being no pro-European candidates in the second round of the election. On 23 September, Sandu announced that her team managed to collect 30,000 signatures in her favor, out of which only 25,000 (the maximum number allowed) were presented to the CEC. After registering Sandu's candidacy, CEC announced that she would be listed sixth on the ballot. On 2 October 2020, Sandu officially launched her campaign. During her campaign launch event, Sandu held 2 speeches, one in Romanian and one in Russian, promising to fight
corruption,
poverty and to reform the
criminal justice system. Other priorities of her campaign were reducing
unemployment, raising the minimum
pension to 2,000
lei (around 114
USD) and building closer ties with the
European Union. Sandu's campaign accused her main opponent, the incumbent president Dodon, of deliberately hindering criminal justice system reform, poor management of the
COVID-19 pandemic and its
economic impact, usage of
administrative resources in his campaign and attempts to rig the election. Sandu tried multiple times to organize a debate with Dodon, which the latter refused to attend. On 30 October 2020, Sandu officially announced the end of her campaign for the first round, saying that she managed to visit all of Moldova's
districts and organize over 300 meetings with voters.
Renato Usatîi On 27 July 2020,
Renato Usatîi announced that he wanted the people to decide whether he should run for president in 2020. During a
press conference, he asked people to record short videos in which they would express their views on his potential candidacy and send them to him before 27 August 2020. On 26 August 2020, Usatîi posted a YouTube compilation video with people expressing support for his candidacy and claimed that tens of thousands of people asked him to run for president. The next day, Usatîi organized an open air press conference during which he officially announced his candidacy for the 2020 elections. On 7 September 2020, Usatîi was the second candidate to submit the necessary signatures supporting him to the CEC. Later, it was announced that he would be listed first on the ballot. Usatîi's campaign officially started on 2 October 2020. During his campaign launch event, he promised to serve and represent the people, fight
corruption and
nepotism and solve all issues faced by voters. During his campaign, Usatîi emerged as a very fierce critic of the incumbent president Dodon. Usatîi accused him of spending a week in a luxury resort financed by
taxpayer money, fabricating opinion polls, illegally spying on his campaign and attempting to rig the election by paying Moldovan citizens from
Transnistria to vote for him. He also organized events to protest against Dodon and promised to prosecute him if elected. Dodon refused to address Usatîi's accusations and declared that he wanted to focus instead on concrete policies. Widely considered a populist candidate, Usatîi declared that if elected, he would organize
snap parliamentary elections, eradicate corruption by forming a Moldovan equivalent of
Mossad, abolish
district authorities and intensify economic cooperation with Romania and Ukraine. Usatîi organized multiple meetings with voters and participated in two televised debates. Usatîi officially announced the end of his campaign for the first round on 30 October 2020. After his elimination in the first round, Usatîi advised his supporters to vote against Dodon in the second round but did not specifically endorse Sandu.
Violeta Ivanov In May 2020, Violeta Ivanov left the
Democratic Party of Moldova and joined the
Șor Party. Shortly after, she became the vice-president of the Șor Party's
parliamentary faction. In August 2020, several media outlets speculated that Ivanov was going to participate in the presidential election. This was confirmed on 6 September 2020, when
Ilan Shor announced that Ivanov was the party's candidate for presidency. Ivanov officially started her campaign on 2 October 2020. Her campaign prioritized
regional development, improvements in
agriculture, strengthening the social security and
healthcare systems and fighting
corruption. During the campaign, several members of the
Pro Moldova parliamentary group endorsed Ivanov. After the first round concluded, Sandu accused the Șor Party of indirectly bribing voters through their network of social stores. Shor rejected Sandu's accusations and said that his actions should be seen not as bribing but as "investments on the people". After Ivanov's elimination in the first round, Ilan Shor advised the Șor Party's voters to vote for the candidate that would support the party's program and did not explicitly endorse any of the candidates in the second round.
Andrei Năstase At the start of 2020, Andrei Năstase promoted the idea of there being a joint
pro-European candidate for the 2020 elections, a candidate who was not a member of any
political party and would be supported by all the
right-wing and
unionist parties of Moldova. After the negotiations for a joint candidate failed, Năstase announced on 2 March 2020 that he would participate in the presidential elections. On 3 October 2020, Năstase officially started his campaign. It focused on eradicating corruption, reforming the
judiciary, raising the minimum pension to 2500
lei (around 143
USD), improving Moldova's international credibility, building closer ties with the
European Union, promoting
family values and preserving national culture. Throughout his campaign, Năstase emphasized that, according to opinion polls, he was the only one able to beat incumbent President Dodon in a potential runoff and that Sandu would lose in the second round in the same way she did in the
2016 elections. On 15 October, Năstase publicly asked Sandu to withdraw her candidacy and endorse him for president. Sandu refused his proposal saying that the candidate with the most votes in the first round should be the one facing Dodon in the runoff. After being eliminated in the first round, Năstase announced his unconditional support for Maia Sandu in the second round.
Tudor Deliu Deliu, a parliamentarian from the
Liberal Democratic Party of Moldova, launched his candidacy from his home village of
Malcoci at the beginning of October. He espoused
separation of powers, emphasizing the need to reduce corruption in the judiciary. He also promised to defend human rights of all citizens, including minorities, and to sign a trade agreement with the
European Union.
Octavian Țîcu Octavian Țîcu announced that he intended to participate in the presidential elections in October 2019. On 25 July 2020, the Republican Political Council of the
National Unity Party officially nominated Țîcu as the party's candidate for the presidency. On 3 October 2020, Țîcu announced that he was denied registration by the CEC and accused incumbent president Dodon of being the man behind the CEC's decision. Two days later, the CEC revised its decision and registered Țîcu as a candidate. Țîcu officially launched his campaign on 7 October 2020. His program underlined five main priorities: snap parliamentary elections, ending the
international isolation of Moldova, reunification of Moldova's infrastructure with that of Romania, adapting Moldova's education system to Romanian standards and forming a unified security system with Romania and NATO. Țîcu endorsed Maia Sandu in the second round.
Dorin Chirtoacă In June 2020, the
Union Political Movement (MPU) promoted the idea of a joint
unionist candidate for the 2020 elections. Its proposal was mainly aimed at the
National Unity Party, an also unionist party that planned on participating in the presidential elections. After it became clear that the negotiations would most likely fail, the MPU nominated
Dorin Chirtoacă for the presidency but emphasized that they were still open to the idea of there being a joint candidate. On 29 September 2020, Chirtoacă submitted the necessary signatures in his support to the CEC and sharply criticized the fact that the signature collection requirement was kept in place during the
COVID-19 pandemic. After initially invalidating a large portion of the signatures Chirtoacă presented, which could have resulted in him being denied registration, the CEC revised its decision and registered him as a candidate on 5 October 2020. Chirtoacă officially launched his campaign on 10 October 2020. Being one of the explicitly unionist candidates, Chirtoacă's campaign rested on the advantages of a potential unification of Moldova and Romania including higher wages, pensions and subsidies in agriculture, improvements in healthcare, reductions in
unemployment,
decentralization, regional development and increased security provided by
NATO. During his campaign, Chirtoacă repeatedly accused incumbent president Dodon of cooperating with the
Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation, sharing secret documents with Russian
security agencies and being financed by Russia. Chirtoacă endorsed Maia Sandu in the second round.
Second round Igor Dodon On 3 November, during the second round of the electoral campaign, while Dodon was talking about Sandu, he modified a proverb and said , meaning "do not change the
pigeon on your hand by the
magpie on the fence" and referring to himself as the "pigeon". Many
memes were spread on Moldovan social media based on this statement of Dodon. After this, Moldovan citizens opposing Dodon, including members of the
diaspora who were attacked by him earlier, started calling him a ("pigeon"). Sandu responded to this the next day by declaring that "an injured pigeon came out to the press and began to chant songs of mourning", later uploading a video on her
TikTok account feeding pigeons and saying that "they are not at fault".
Maia Sandu Sandu's entry to the second round set up a rematch of the
2016 Moldovan presidential election, where Dodon defeated Sandu by less than 5 percent. Mindful of this result, Sandu warned supporters about "potential for foreign interference and fraud to affect the outcome". ==Debates==