"The Coup Has Reached Its Terrifying Conclusion” — Romania's Most Trusted Politician Călin Georgescu Blasts Illegitimate PM as Threat to Romanian Statehood After Court Delays His Case * The Gateway Pundit * by Robert Semonsen
Călin Georgescu outside of the court house in Bucharest, Romania via Inquam Photos / Vlad Bereholschi
The ongoing criminal case against Călin Georgescu—the Romanian national-sovereigntist, anti-globalist figure whose presidential run was crushed by Romania’s globalist state after he won the first round of voting in 2024—has been postponed until August 19, adding another chapter to the continuing dismantling of Romanian democracy.
The trial at Bucharest’s District Court 1 had been expected to move forward Tuesday, June 9th, but proceedings were delayed after the judge handling the case was promoted. The postponement also comes amid broader protests inside Romania’s justice system.
Georgescu appeared at the courthouse Tuesday morning as one of the first hearings on the merits of the case was set to begin. He faces accusations of legionary propaganda, charges widely viewed as politically motivated and part of a wider campaign to silence Romania’s increasingly relevant sovereigntist, anti-globalist opposition.
Upon arrival, the former presidential candidate bypassed reporters to greet supporters, who had gathered from across Romania and the diaspora to show solidarity against what they regard as blatant political persecution against him.
It’s worth highlighting that Călin Georgescu is currently Romania’s most trusted politician, according to the latest major national poll conducted by CURS in the first half of May.
The poll reveals Călin Georgescu as Romania’s most trusted political figure with 32% support, narrowly edging out President Nicușor Dan at 31%. The ranking is completed by PNL leader Ilie Bolojan with 25% and national-conservative AUR president George Simion at 23%.
The case is inseparable from the political shock that followed Georgescu’s first-round victory in the 2024 presidential election, along with his projected blowout victory in the election’s final round. Romania’s ruling—and deeply unpopular—regime responded not by accepting the voters’ verdict, but by destroying the election process itself.
Georgescu has repeatedly described the annulment of the election as a coup against the Romanian people. Speaking exclusively to The Gateway Pundit on Tuesday, he escalated that accusation with one of his most forceful statements yet.
“The coup d’état that began on December 6, 2024, has now reached its terrifying conclusion,” Georgescu said. “On June 4, 2026, the occupant of Cotroceni drove the final nail into the coffin of Romanian democracy, canceling parliamentary elections and silencing the voice of the people with a single, devastating stroke.”
His remarks were aimed directly at President Nicușor Dan, whom Georgescu accused of becoming a threat to the Romanian state. He called on members of parliament to begin impeachment proceedings immediately.
“To every parliamentarian who still carries love for this country in their heart, to every elected representative who swore an oath to Romania and its citizens, the hour has come to rise,” Georgescu said. “Begin the suspension procedure against Nicușor Dan immediately. Not tomorrow. Not after deliberation. Now!”
Georgescu said the president’s actions could no longer be treated as ordinary political mismanagement. He accused Dan of taking steps that endanger the survival of Romanian statehood itself.
“This man is not simply a poor leader,” Georgescu said. “He is a clear and present danger to the very existence of Romanian statehood.”
Georgescu said Romania’s institutions were being dismantled piece by piece while elected officials hesitated. He warned that delay would amount to complicity.
“His actions are reckless, calculated, and destructive,” Georgescu said. “Every hour of inaction is another hour he spends dismantling the foundations of this nation, brick by brick.”
Georgescu then turned his message into a direct appeal to parliament, warning lawmakers that their response would define their place in history. “Romania is watching you. History is watching you,” he said.
“If you do not act now, there will be nothing left to save,” Georgescu continued. “The window is closing. Stand up, speak out, and defend the Republic before the last light of democracy in Romania is extinguished forever.”
He ended with an urgent warning. “The time is now. There is no tomorrow.”
The statement was immediately amplified by supporters who have long argued that Georgescu was not defeated by voters, but removed by a political and judicial system unwilling to tolerate a sovereignist challenger. To them, the case now unfolding in court is not merely a legal proceeding — it is part of the same political struggle that began when the election result was overturned.
Back in February, a bombshell report from the United States Congress rocked the Old Continent, thrusting Romania—and its corrupt liberal-globalist regime—into the spotlight as the epicenter of what American lawmakers are calling a modern political coup disguised as “election security.
According to the findings just released by the US House Judiciary Committee, Romania’s 2024 presidential election, in which frontrunner Călin Georgescu was abruptly barred from running, was not simply mishandled—it was deliberately overturned. The interim congressional report, issued in early 2026, concludes that the Romanian electoral process was systematically subverted through censorship, institutional coercion, and foreign interference that came not from Moscow, as the globalist politicians and their lying lackeys in the mainstream press claimed, but from Brussels. The report states outright that Romania suffered a de facto coup d’état on December 6, 2024, when its Constitutional Court annulled the presidential election results.
Georgescu’s supporters have described him as the “banned candidate,” a phrase that has become central to the movement around him. Their argument is quite simple: a candidate who wins the first round of a presidential election should face the voters in the second round, not be buried under shady legal and institutional maneuvers.
That view was echoed by national-conservative AUR leader George Simion, who issued a message of unity after the court’s latest decision. Simion has repeatedly argued that Romania cannot return to political normality until the democratic process interrupted after Georgescu’s victory is restored.
According to Simion, the solution remains the suspension of the president. He has said the opposition will not support the new technocratic government nominated by the head of state.
Simion’s position reflects a widening confrontation between Romania’s sovereignist opposition and the governing establishment. The issue, for the right, is no longer only who occupies office, but whether elections still have meaning when the system can cancel outcomes it dislikes.
Framing the return of democracy in stark terms, Georgescu said that “return to democracy means round 2 back,” referring to the second round of the presidential election that was denied to the Romanian people.
That demand has become a rallying cry for voters who believe Romania’s sovereignty has been compromised by domestic power networks and foreign-aligned interests. They argue that the cancellation of the election exposed a deeper contempt for popular will.
The case also highlights the growing divide between establishment politics and national-sovereigntist movements across Europe. From Romania to other parts of the continent, national-sovereignist right parties say liberal institutions increasingly treat dissent not as democratic opposition, but as a threat to be managed, banned, investigated, or removed.
The August 19 postponement more than a pause in an ordinary trial. It is another delay in a broader national reckoning over who rules Romania—the voters, or the system that overturned their choice.
As the case moves into late summer, the political stakes remain enormous. Georgescu, Simion, and their allies are now placing one demand at the center of Romanian politics: restore the people’s voice, suspend the president, and return Romania to a democratic path before public trust collapses completely.
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