Mass protests over Eurovision vote prompt resignation of Moldovan Radio/TV head

Published 19 May, 2026 09:29am 2 min read
Satoshi, representing Moldova, performs "Viva, Moldova!" during the Grand Final of the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna, Austria. -- Reuters
Satoshi, representing Moldova, performs "Viva, Moldova!" during the Grand Final of the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna, Austria. -- Reuters

Mass public protests over voting in last weekend’s Eurovision Song Contest prompted the resignation on Monday of the head of ​Moldova’s public radio and television broadcaster.

Many hundreds of fans took to social media to denounce Moldova’s jury vote in Saturday’s contest, which gave only three votes to neighbouring Romania.

Moldova, before achieving independence in 1991, was once ​, in turn, a part of the Russian Empire, Greater Romania, and the Soviet Union. It shares strong linguistic and cultural ties ⁠with Romania.

“This was my decision,” Vlad Turcanu, director general of Moldovan ​Radio and Television, told a hastily-called news conference.

“We distanced ourselves from the jury’s ​voting, but it is still our responsibility, my responsibility in the first instance, as head of this institution.”

The resignation was a dramatic demonstration of the role played by social ​media in one of Europe’s poorest countries, whose president has denounced ​Russia’s invasion of neighbouring Ukraine and is vowing to join the European Union by 2030.

Moldova’s ‌jury, ⁠selected by the public broadcaster, gave the maximum 12 points to the entry from Poland, which finished 12th.

Ten points went to Israel, the second-place finisher in the contest, jolted by boycotts by five countries over Israeli ​actions in Gaza. ​Bulgaria was declared ⁠the winner.

Television viewers, whose votes are also considered in the contest’s final standings, gave 12 points to Romania, ​represented by Alexandra Capitanescu.

Viewers also expressed outrage that the jury ​had ⁠awarded no points to the Ukrainian entry in the contest.

“The only thing that matters is votes by ordinary people,” former Defence Minister Anatol Salaru wrote on ⁠Facebook. “This ​was a vote among brothers. The rest is ​an unimportant detail.”

Moldova’s entry, Satoshi, said the mass public support for Romania “reflects the real opinion of ​our society.”

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