Prelude and bloc formations On 31 January, Moldovan opposition leader
Alexandr Stoianoglo, who lost the 2024 presidential election to President Sandu, announced the formation of a new coalition to challenge the pro-Western ruling majority. The coalition, called
Alternative, unites three political parties led by Chișinău Mayor
Ion Ceban, former Prime Minister
Ion Chicu, and former lawmaker
Mark Tkachuk. While Stoianoglo campaigned on a foreign policy that included both Russia and the West, he had leaned toward Russia, with his past presidential candidacy backed by the pro-Moscow
Party of Socialists of the Republic of Moldova (PSRM). In 2023, the
National Alternative Movement (MAN) and the
European Social Democratic Party (PSDE) started talks for a merger which fell apart in the prelude of the 2024 presidential election.
Tudor Ulianovschi claimed that PSDE was not invited into the MAN's Alternative coalition. In May, former PDM leader
Dumitru Diacov called for a merger of PSDE and
Marian Lupu's
Respect Moldova Movement (MRM). In July, PSDE proposed a "European Moldova Alliance" with the Coalition for Unity and Welfare (CUB) and the League of Cities and Communes (LOC), both former members of the
Together bloc. In August, Boris Foca announced that the
Modern Democratic Party (PDMM) will compete and called former PDM members to join. Diacov also reiterated his call for a merger of PSDE, MRM, and PDMM. On 4 June 2025, the For Moldova Platform was formed aiming to unite the opposition parties and later received support from the PSRM, the
Party of Communists and
Future of Moldova Party. On 10 June,
George Simion, leader of the party
Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) in
Romania, called on Moldovans to vote in the election to "take revenge" and "defeat politically" Sandu. At the
2025 Romanian presidential election, in the second round, Sandu and PAS had supported Simion's opponent,
Nicușor Dan, who won the election. On 4 July,
Igor Dodon announced negotiations for a left-wing bloc.
Vladimir Voronin later confirmed that the bloc would include the PSRM, PCRM,
Heart of Moldova Party and the Future of Moldova Party. The
Patriotic Electoral Bloc was registered on 3 August without the PCRM, In a 6 July 2025 congress of the
Victory bloc held in
Moscow in Russia, the bloc's leader, Moldovan fugitive
oligarch Ilan Shor, stated that he wanted
Evghenia Guțul,
Governor of Gagauzia, to head Victory's electoral list for the 2025 parliamentary election. At the moment, Guțul was being investigated for two criminal cases and was under
house arrest. Shor also stated at the same congress that he believed "the only salvation" for Moldova was "union with the Russian Federation" and that "it makes no sense to talk about the country's independence", adding the comment "one currency, one parliament". On 5 August 2025, just weeks before the election, Guțul was sentenced to seven years in prison for using undeclared Russian funds to finance political activities. In July, the
Central Electoral Commission (CEC) cancelled Victory's registration. but on the next day (3 August),
Chance, FASM and Victory (as well as non-member
Agrarian Party of Moldova) were barred too. The
Ministry of Justice announced that it sought to dissolve said parties alongside also Victory bloc member
Revival Party. On 15 August, Revival was barred from running too. On 20 August, PCRM leader Voronin commented on the so-called "kuliok" (black bag) case, stating that his coalition partner PSRM leader Dodon received 860,000
euros from
Vladimir Plahotniuc and that he had already
testified before the Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office. In the case, Dodon was accused of
passive corruption and of organizing and accepting funding for a political party from a criminal organization. According to the charges, Dodon accepted money from then
PDM leader and later fugitive oligarch Plahotniuc in 2019 to fund the PSRM. Voronin withdrew his statements a day later, calling them a sarcastic joke. Voronin had criticized Dodon many times in the past, considering him a "traitor" for having left the PCRM in 2011 and having divided the PCRM's voters with the PSRM. At the time, Voronin only held the 49th place on the Patriotic Bloc's list of candidates, which Dodon headed, having little chances of entering the parliament, although Voronin stated there was an agreement within the bloc to promote him to 32nd place. According to Moldovan journalist and
Nokta founder Mihail Sirkeli, his low place on the list would have humiliated Voronin, with Sirkeli suggesting Voronin could have made the statements about the kuliok case either to sabotage the bloc or as a personal maneuver to secure a safe position on its list. On 23 August, the registration of the
Greater Moldova Party (PMM) was rejected by the CEC, the stated reason being that, following the exclusion from its electoral list of a person convicted of
domestic violence, which made the person ineligible for being included as a candidate, the party's list failed to meet the minimum quota of candidates from each gender required by the legislation in effect. Party president
Victoria Furtună, who has ties to Shor, claimed that the decision was politically motivated and that she would appeal it. The Party for People, Nature, and Animals (PONA), led by Ion Dron, was also excluded for the same reason and also because of incomplete documentation as the CEC stated.
Start of the campaign On 29 August, the
electoral campaign officially started. On 2 September, anti-corruption officials and
prosecutors performed raids in
Chișinău and
Comrat with regards to a case of illegal funding of the Heart of Moldova Party (PRIM). As the National Anti-Corruption Center (CNA) declared that day, 17 people were suspects in the case, of whom 13 were under investigation and four others had been detained; the latter included three officials of PRIM's Comrat territorial organization and a deputy mayor of Comrat. In response, Vlah accused the government of exerting pressures. On 5 September, Moldova's Interinstitutional Supervisory Council decided to block funds and economic resources in Moldova belonging to Vlah. She had been sanctioned by
Canada on 28 August, being accused of Russian interference activities before the election. On 8 September, Alternative bloc's Ceban, who on 9 July was banned from traveling into Romania and the entire
Schengen Area for "national security reasons", was issued a warning by the CEC because, despite having been suspended from his duties as Chișinău mayor on 29 August, he requested a
temporary visa citing his status as mayor to attend an event in
Rome, Italy, after the electoral campaign started. On 10 September,
Our Party (PN) leader
Renato Usatîi announced that a PN candidate for the election, Stela Vlas, had been excluded from the party's list after being informed that she had run for the unconstitutional Shor-affiliated Chance party at the
2023 Moldovan local elections. On the same day, Alternative's Tkachuk stated that the 2003
Kozak memorandum should have been signed, sparking a protest by
Transnistrian War veterans two days later. According to an investigation by Moldovan newspaper
NordNews, a petition sent on 4 September by the PRIM to the Moldovan parliament and the
Ministry of Education and Research for the repair of the school in the village of
Constantinovca and the road to access the school contained only a few authentic signatures out of a total of 62, with most coming from people who either were dead, did not live in the village or directly did not exist. The school administration and the Edineț District Council told
NordNews they had not informed the authorities about the issues raised in the petition, and one of the villagers was surprised to find his name on it along with a signature that did not belong to him. The list of signatures was reportedly compiled by Aliona Pistriuga, a PRIM member and then the 29th person on the Patriotic Bloc's list of candidates.
Forging signatures and including false information in official documents constitutes a crime under Moldovan law. On 16 September, Vlah was banned from entering
Lithuania for five years due to her ties to Russia and her support for Russia's attempts at exerting influence over Moldovan politics as Lithuania's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated. On 15 September, the CEC ruled that PAS and the
Dignity and Truth Platform (PPDA) did not conform a camouflaged electoral bloc. This had been reported to the CEC by the Alternative bloc and the National Moldovan Party (PNM). On 17 September, the CEC issued a warning to the Patriotic Bloc in the context of suspicions of illegal financing of the PRIM, also deciding that it would ask the Ministry of Justice to establish whether the PRIM's activities should be restricted and that it would carry out two
financial audits, one for the PRIM and another for the bloc. The CEC also issued a warning for PAS and another for suspended
Minister of Environment and PAS candidate
Sergiu Lazarencu since, despite having been suspended from his duties during the election campaign, Lazarencu presented himself as minister at two public events, with one of them featuring government insignia on a screen. On 19 September, the Ministry of Justice requested the Central Court of Appeal to restrict the activity of Vlah's PRIM for a year.
Final week On 22 September, the unionist (pro-
unification with Romania) Unity of the Nation Bloc (BUN), composed by the
National Liberal Party (PNL; led by
Mihai Severovan) and the Home National Reunification Party (PRNA; led by
Valentin Dolganiuc), announced it had withdrawn from the election and endorsed PAS, with both signing a political collaboration agreement. The PNM's leader Dragoș Galbur criticized the BUN's decision and claimed that he had been called by politicians both from Moldova and outside and advised to withdraw from the election. As of 26 September however, the BUN was still featured as a contender on the approved lists of candidates for the election, with representatives of the bloc stating they had presented a withdrawal request to the CEC two days before. On the day of the election, CEC vice president Pavel Postica stated that the BUN had not officially withdrawn from the election and that its endorsement of the PAS had been "political declaration"; the "withdrawn" stamp was thus not put on the ballots for the bloc. On 23 September, former Moldovan president
Nicolae Timofti endorsed PAS on the election. On the next day, Moldovan fugitive oligarch
Vladimir Plahotniuc called on Moldovans to vote for opposition parties that had real chances of surpassing the electoral threshold, and
Vladimir Cebotari, the founder of the
Modern Democratic Party of Moldova (PDMM) and an associate of Plahotniuc, incited citizens to vote for either
Alternative or
Our Party (PN). Both
Ion Ceban, one of Alternative's leaders, and PN leader
Renato Usatîi disavowed his endorsement. Also on the same day,
President of Romania Nicușor Dan urged
Moldovan citizens in Romania to vote in the election, as it was "a decisive moment for Moldova". Also on 22 September, over 250 searches across over 100 localities in Moldova were carried out by the Moldovan police and agents from other institutions in the context of a criminal case dealing with the preparation of "mass disorder and destabilization" coordinated from Russia through criminal elements. Dodon stated that searches had taken place in the homes of PSRM colleagues in the north of the country, resulting in the detention of four or five people, including the vice president of the PSRM's organization in
Rîșcani District. Dodon also declared that protests would take place if the PRIM's activity was limited. On 24 September, Russia summoned Moldova's ambassador to the country
Lilian Darii to receive a note of protest after Moldova allegedly refused to accredit Russian
observers for the election; Postica stated that the CEC had not received any such official accreditation request so far. On 24 September, Chișinău police found 200 election
ballots in a printing shop in the capital bearing the stamp "voted" for the Alternative bloc. According to
Prime Minister Dorin Recean and the Moldovan authorities, they were to be allegedly used in a "carousel-type scheme" for
electoral fraud at the election; as they described, in the scheme, a fake ballot would be inserted by a paid voter into the
ballot box, and a clean official one, which was to be marked with the same political formation as the fake one, would be taken out of the
polling station for its use by the next paid voter. Ceban declared that the ballots were models for
campaign advertising, with him demanding a public apology from the police and accusing PAS of lying. However, the CEC stated that the ballots did not meet publicity law requirements and that they constituted electoral agitation and
de facto misleading advertising, given, as Postica stated, the difficulty for a simple voter to distinguish a real ballot from a printed one. According to
Dan Perciun,
Minister of Education and Research, Alternative's models looked identical to real ballots. Plahotniuc had been on the run since 2019 and was the prime suspect in the
2014 Moldovan bank fraud scandal that saw 1 billion dollars, equivalent to 12% of Moldova's
GDP at the time, stolen from the country's banking system. Plahotniuc's lawyer accused the ruling PAS government of turning the extradition into a "political spectacle", of trying to present the event as "a success of its own" and of having done everything possible to ensure the extradition would take place on the eve of the election. On 26 September, PAS organized a rally in which representatives and supporters promoted the party's main campaign messages and urged Moldovans to vote in the election. On the same day, the Promo-LEX
NGO reported that it had documented 84 cases of use of administrative resources during the election campaign, with 66 of them from PAS alone, eight from the Patriotic Bloc and five from Alternative. Also on 25 September, the Heart of Moldova Party (PRIM)'s activity was precautionarily limited by the Central Court of Appeal for the duration of the examination of its case until a verdict was pronounced. This followed a request, accepted by the Court on 23 September, by lawyer
Fadei Nagacevschi on the party's behalf to verify the constitutionality of the provisions of the law on the basis of which the limitation of the PRIM's activity was requested, which the CSJ declared inadmissible two days later. In response, Dodon promised that if Vlah and her colleagues were excluded from the Patriotic Bloc's list and the bloc managed to form a parliamentary majority, Vlah would be in the new government. On 26 September, the CEC excluded the PRIM from the election amid accusations of illegal financing of the party. The Patriotic Bloc was required to remove PRIM members from its list of candidates within 24 hours, and members and supporters of the bloc organized a protest over the decision at the CEC's headquarters. On 26 September as well, Victoria Furtună's Greater Moldova Party (PMM) was also excluded from the election by the CEC, including under the justification that the party benefited from illegal foreign funding and that it promoted the interests of a foreign state, with the CEC also stating that it would ask the Ministry of Justice to limit the party's activity. The decision followed a complaint by the PSDE's leader Ulianovschi amid investigations by Moldovan newspapers
Ziarul de Gardă and
NordNews that showed the mobilization of the Russian NGO Evrazia's network in support of the PMM (as well as the Patriotic Bloc and Alternative). After receiving information from the
Security and Intelligence Service (SIS) and other institutions, the CEC determined that there existed suspicions of the party's illegal funding and of connections with formations created by oligarch Shor, with the CEC also highlighting Furtună's
sanctioned status in the EU since 15 July due to destabilizing or threatening actions against Moldovan sovereignty and independence. In the same session in which the PMM was excluded, and another to prime minister Recean, the 2nd on the PAS' list of candidates, Furthermore, that same day, Moldovan newspaper
Deschide.MD published alleged audio recordings from closed groups of Shor's network in which it was affirmed that Shor had personally ordered a few days earlier that the network's sympathizers be mobilized to vote for the Patriotic Bloc. 26 September was the last day of the electoral campaign. ==Election==