The candidates of the electoral bloc ACUM in the national constituency and in single-member constituencies, if they are elected members of the future Parliament, promise not to take part in the formation of a formal or informal government coalition with the Democratic Party, the Party of Socialists, the Shor Party, the Our Party and other pro-oligarchic and anti-European parties. The commitment was made in a public event, IPN reports.
In the name of freedom, democracy and development of the Republic of Moldova, the candidates pledged that all the decisions they will take will be only in the national interest and in accordance with the party’s political commitments. “I promise before the people who voted for me to vacate my seat if I do not respect my commitment,” says a point of the commitment signed by the ACUM candidates.
Before the signing ceremony, the co-president of the bloc ACUM Maia Sandu, the leader of the Party “Action and Solidarity”, said the Moldovans for almost three decades have struggled for a better life. Once in four years they vote people who would represent them in Parliament, but the political class disappointed, with small exceptions. Some defected to other parties, while others lack professionalism. The current political class undermined democracy, didn’t have vision, courage and interest to build a united country. “The ruling regime controls the country, considering it its own business. We still have time to stop them from taking the country to dictatorship,” stated the politician.
The leader of the Party “Platform Dignity and Truth” Andrei Năstase, who is also the co-president of the bloc ACUM, said he pledges, alongside other colleagues, to root out corruption, banditry and oligarchy in Moldova and to ensure the people’s safety and preconditions for a European and democratic country, while the bandits will be jailed. “We, those from the bloc ACUM, will erase any trace of injustice,” stated the politician.
The electoral bloc ACUM DA PAS is running in the parliamentary elections in the national constituency under No. 2 on the ballot. In single-member constituencies, it has 51 candidates.