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| Kaum beachtet von der Weltöffentlichkeit, bahnt sich der erste internationale Strafprozess gegen die Verantwortlichen und Strippenzieher der CoronaâP(l)andemie an. Denn beim Internationalem Strafgerichtshof (IStGH) in Den Haag wurde im Namen des britischen Volkes eine Klage wegen âVerbrechen gegen die Menschlichkeitâ gegen hochrangige und namhafte Eliten eingebracht. Corona-Impfung: Anklage vor Internationalem Strafgerichtshof wegen Verbrechen gegen die Menschlichkeit! â UPDATE[link1] |
Libera Nos A Malo (Deliver us from evil)[link2]
Transition News![]() Feed Titel: Homepage - Transition News[link3] Bundesregierung: Schwarz-GrĂŒn fĂŒr Ricarda Lang âauf jeden Fall eine Optionâ[link4]
![]() Union und die GrĂŒnen wĂ€ren nach Ansicht von GrĂŒnen-Chefin Ricarda Lang geeignete Koalitionspartner ab 2025. In drei BundeslĂ€ndern gebe es bereits funktionierende Koalitionen. Baden-WĂŒrttembergs MinisterprĂ€sident Winfried Kretschmann hofft auf eine âVerbindung von Ăkologie und Ăkonomieâ. Dengue-Fieber in Brasilien ausgebrochen: Kollabiert das Gesundheitswesen?[link6]
![]() Brasilien kÀmpft gegen den schwersten Dengue-Ausbruch seit Jahrzehnten. In mehreren Gebieten wurde der Notstand ausgerufen. Bank of America investiert wieder in fossile Brennstoffe[link8]
![]() Die Bank of America hat ihr Versprechen zurĂŒckgenommen, die grĂŒne Agenda zu unterstĂŒtzen und nicht mehr in Kohlenwasserstoffe â Kohle, Erdöl und Erdgas â [âŠ] Tucker Carlson bestĂ€tigt zum ersten Mal offiziell, daĂ es ein Interview mit PrĂ€sident Putin geben wird, und begrĂŒndet ausfĂŒhrlich warum das nötig ist. Twitter/X[link10]
Tucker Carlson bestĂ€tigt zum ersten Mal offiziell, daĂ es ein Interview mit PrĂ€sident Putin geben wird, und begrĂŒndet ausfĂŒhrlich warum das nötig ist. Twitter/X(Sobald eine deutsche Ăbersetzung vorliegt, wird das hier nochmal...
Umfrage der Bertelsmann Stiftung: Viele junge Deutsche misstrauen Regierung und Parlament[link11]
![]() Viele junge Deutschen zweifeln daran, ob die Politik kĂŒnftige Herausforderungen lösen könne. Experten sehen darin ein Warnsignal fĂŒr die Demokratie. | Peter Mayer![]() Feed Titel: tkp.at â Der Blog fĂŒr Science & Politik[link13] KernstĂŒcke der neuen WHO VertrĂ€ge bringen Verlust der nationalen SouverĂ€nitĂ€t der Mitgliedsstaaten[link14]
![]() Bekanntlich sollen bis Ende Mai Ănderungen der Internationalen Gesundheitsvorschriften (IGV) beschlossen werden, die der WHO eine massive Ausweitung ihrer völkerrechtlich verbindlichen Vollmachten bringen sollen. [âŠ] Hardware-Schwachstelle in Apples M-Chips ermöglicht VerschlĂŒsselung zu knacken[link16]
![]() Apple-Computer unterscheiden sich seit langem von Windows-PCs dadurch, dass sie schwieriger zu hacken sind. Das ist ein Grund, warum einige sicherheitsbewusste Computer- und Smartphone-Nutzer [âŠ] 25 Jahre weniger Lebenserwartung fĂŒr "vollstĂ€ndig" Geimpfte[link18]
![]() Eine beunruhigende Studie hat ergeben, dass Menschen, die mit mRNA-Injektionen âvollstĂ€ndigâ gegen Covid geimpft wurden, mit einem Verlust von bis zu 25 Jahren ihrer [âŠ] OstermĂ€rsche und Warnungen vor dem Frieden[link20]
![]() Ostern ist auch die Zeit der pazifistischen und antimilitaristischen OstermĂ€rsche. Grund genug, um davor zu warnen. Tod nach Covid-Spritze: Ărzte im Visier der Justiz[link22]
![]() In Italien stehen fĂŒnf Ărzte nach dem Tod einer jungen Frau aufgrund der âImpfungâ vor einer Anklage. |
NZZ

Feed Titel: Wissenschaft - News und HintergrĂŒnde zu Wissen & Forschung | NZZ[link24]
Die ErdatmosphĂ€re schrumpft â darum steigt im All das Risiko von Zusammenstössen von Satelliten[link25]
Hausarrest, HalsbĂ€nder, Moratorien â wie man der Katze das Mausen abgewöhnt[link26]
Psychose bei jungen Menschen: Erkennt man ihre Vorboten frĂŒh genug, lĂ€sst sich erfolgreich gegensteuern[link27]
Mit der Ariane 6 hat Europa wieder einen autonomen Zugang zum Weltraum. Bei Elon Musk explodiert derweil ein weiteres Starship[link28]
INTERVIEW - AnschlÀge in Deutschland: «Manche Menschen verlieren durch das Vorbild des AttentÀters die letzten Hemmungen»[link29]
Verfassungsblog

Feed Titel: Verfassungsblog[link30]
Romanian Militant Democracy in Action[link31]
On March 11, 2025, the Romanian Constitutional Court (RCC) definitively barred far-right extremist CÄlin Georgescu from running as a candidate in the upcoming presidential election. This decision marks the end of a critical period for Romaniaâs young democracy that started in November 2024 and represents the culmination of a series of landmark decisions through which the RCC has strengthened the principle of militant democracy that underpins the Romanian Constitution. Moreover, the RCC has affirmed the EU and NATO membership as a central component of Romaniaâs democracy and rule of law, shielding it from subversion by the principles of non-regression and militant democracy. Collectively, these decisions represent unique constitutional developments in Romaniaâs recent history, as the RCC establishes new eligibility criteria for presidential candidates and asserts its competence to annul the presidential election.
Act I: the Ruling no 2 of October 5, 2024
On October 5, 2024, the Romanian Constitutional Court issued Ruling no 2. The Ruling dealt with the dispute over the registration of Diana ÈoÈoacÄ, another far-right extremist politician, to run as a presidential candidate. Under Article 31(1) of Law no 370/2004, which governs the election of Romaniaâs President, voters have the right to challenge a candidateâs registration before the Constitutional Court. The Courtâs Ruling is remarkable for mainly two reasons. It is the first-ever decision in which the Constitutional Court barred a candidate from the presidential race on grounds of antidemocratic behaviour. Moreover, the Ruling connects democracy and rule of law with Romaniaâs membership in the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, making Romaniaâs withdrawal from these two communities unconstitutional.
The Court based its reasoning on Article 1(5) of Romanian Constitution, which affirms the supremacy of the Constitution and mandates the observance of the laws in Romania (para. 53). The Court indicated that while respecting the Constitution is a general obligation for citizens, for presidential candidates this obligation takes on special significance by virtue of Article 80(2) of the Constitution, which lays down the role of Romaniaâs President â âguarding the observance of the Constitutionâ (para. 44). According to the Court, this special obligation of the presidential candidate goes beyond mere attitude or simple compliance, as it requires âactive and responsible manifestationâ. The Court clarified:
âCoherent public discourse oriented towards axiological respect for the Constitution in order to credibly impose/consolidate/value a loyal constitutional behaviour through dialogue and debate, thus indicating and foreshadowing the candidateâs capacity and willingness to engage in the democratic process.â
The Court attached particular weight to the oath that the winner of the presidential election takes, the only oath specifically enshrined in the Constitution (Article 82(2)), and which contains the pledge to respect the Constitution and defend democracy. Consequently, the Court pointed out that while defending democracy is a general obligation of every Romanian citizen, for presidential candidates it constitutes an âessential condition of intrinsic and substantive eligibilityâ, given the constitutional role of Romaniaâs President and the oath that must be taken (para. 47).
Romania is a semi-presidential republic with the President predominantly active in the areas of rule of law, defence, democratic governance, and foreign affairs. Most notably, the President appoints three out of the nine judges to the Constitutional Court and refers other legal conflicts of a constitutional nature to the Constitutional Court, for review. Furthermore, the President calls for referenda on topics of national interest, is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, heads the Supreme Council of National Defence, and finally, has the power to dissolve the Parliament. As specified in Ruling no 2, the President also represents the country in foreign affairs, especially at meetings of the European Council and NATO. The indispensability of these responsibilities for the functioning of democracy in Romania makes it imperative to protect the Office of the President from antidemocratic forces through a limitation on their right to be elected, resulting from the democratic vision of the Constitution. Crucially, the Court regarded the Constitution as a bulwark against abolishing democracy and the rule of law (para 33). Democracy and the rule of law represent the âimmutable and definingâ coordinates of the Romanian constitutional order. This indeed they are: Article 152(1) of the Constitution acts as the eternity clause, while Article 1(3) proclaims democracy and the rule of law as definitory for the Romanian state, organized, under Article 1(4), as a constitutional democracy.
Concerning the 1989 Revolution, the Court repeatedly emphasized that Article 1(3) of the Constitution places democracy and the rule of law as supreme values âin the spirit [âŠ] and the ideals of the Revolution of December 1989â. Having the 1989 Revolution as its foundational moment, the modern Romanian democratic constitutional order is naturally combative towards would-be autocrats seeking to dismantle its democracy and liberty. As the Court put it in Ruling no 2 (para. 38):
âIt is axiomatic that the adoption of the 1991 Constitution signifies the rejection of totalitarian, authoritarian or anarchic regimes, which means that democratic levers cannot be used for the purpose of distorting/deforming/challenging the constitutional order thus established, or Romaniaâs European course.â
Furthermore, Romaniaâs return to Europe in the wake of the Revolution is guaranteed by Romaniaâs membership of the European Union and NATO. In the words of the Court, âmembership of the EU and NATO constitutes the political and military guarantee of the democratic development of the state and of ensuring the existence of the rule of law.â The Court acknowledged that this membership is constitutionally fundamental for democracy, and a guarantee of the âvalues enshrined in the Constitution, being expressly enshrined in itâ â in Articles 148 and 149. Campaigning for Romania to withdraw from the EU and NATO equals campaigning to abolish foundational elements of Romaniaâs constitutional democracy and the âimperatives of the December 1989 Revolutionâ. Hence, the Court has activated the principle of militant democracy against candidate ÈoÈoacÄ, who campaigned for Romaniaâs withdrawal from the EU and NATO.
In a commendable move, the Court further armoured Romaniaâs EU and NATO membership with the principle of non-regression (para. 40). As a pivotal guarantee of the constitutional orderâs democratic foundation, this membership cannot be revoked, not even by modifying the Constitution: ârevision of the Constitution must be carried out in accordance with democratic values and rules, democratic or rule of law regression being excluded. As such, a constitutional revision is always oriented towards a developing and ascending protection of constitutional values and principles, as well as of fundamental rights and freedoms.â Consequently, Romaniaâs EU and NATO memberships enjoy the protection granted by Article 152 of the Constitution and cannot be subject to revision.
Act II: the annulment
Following the first round of voting on November 24, 2024, far-right extremist CÄlin Georgescu emerged in pole position for the second round. The second round never took place, as the Constitutional Court annulled it in Ruling no 32 on December 6, 2024. This Ruling is an expression of militant democracy, and while radical, also an unexpected paradigm shift that took Georgescu and his supporters by surprise, messing up their strategy that presupposed quickly waltzing into the Office of the President after a fraudulent manipulation campaign.
After carefully assessing Ruling no 2 of October 5, the annulment of the election by the Court cannot come as a shock. It is evident from that Ruling that the Court takes an extensive view of its prerogative of being the guarantor of the Constitutionâs supremacy. The Court specifies this in paragraph 4 of Ruling no 32 and in Ruling no 2, invoking Article 1 of the Romanian Constitution to justify its authority in ensuring compliance with the procedure for the election of the President, as established in Article 146(f). It does so in the context of the fundamental values that define the Romanian constitutional order, chief among them being democracy and rule of law. That is why its powers under Article 146(f) cannot be interpreted restrictively. Through fraud, the election was thoroughly deprived of the essential elements that constitute the starting point of the democratic electoral agon, such as fairness, freedom, equality of chances, and transparency. Going forward with such a vitiated Presidential election would have structurally damaged Romaniaâs constitutional order and compromised its core values. Therefore, the Court saw annulment as the only course of action left in order to âprotect both the citizensâ electoral rights, and the constitutional orderâs foundations, essential for maintaining Romaniaâs democratic character and the rule of law.â
Act III: consequences
On March 5, 2025, the Central Electoral Office rejected Georgescuâs registration as a candidate for the May presidential election. The Central Electoral Office is formed anew with the occasion of each election, being composed of 5 judges from the High Court of Justice and Cassation, the president and vice-president of the Permanent Electoral Authority, and a maximum of 10 members of political parties (this time 7). In its decision, the Office applied both Ruling no 2 and Ruling no 32. Ruling no 2 was used to highlight the âdefending democracyâ eligibility requirement, while Ruling no 32 served to clarify that Georgescu was incompatible with this requirement. Given his fraudulent behaviour in the 2024 cancelled election, where he declared 0 lei as his campaigning budget, and which led to the election being heavily vitiated, the Office found Georgescu in breach of his obligation to defend democracy. Georgescuâs appeal to the Constitutional Court was quashed in Ruling no 7 of March 11, 2025. He and his clique of Russian-backed antidemocrats are currently under criminal investigation, inter alia for actions against the constitutional order and false statements concerning electoral expenses and assets declaration.
No standing ovation
There is cause for serious critique concerning Ruling no 2. The Court employed fairly byzantine reasoning in order to reconcile current Romanian electoral law on presidential elections with the finding that ÈoÈoacÄ did not pass the eligibility test of ârespecting the Constitutionâ and âdefending democracyâ, which the procedure for the election of the President in Article 146(f) Constitution apparently now contains. According to Article 28 of Law no 370/2004, there are two categories of persons who cannot run as a presidential candidate: persons younger than 35 years, and those who have been sentenced for crimes. Notably, none of these two conditions were fulfilled in the respective prohibition of the presidential candidacy.
Moreover, Article 53 of the Constitution contains a general limitation clause on rights and freedoms, closely worded after the ECHR. Contrary to what the Court claims (para. 50), it is difficult to see how Articles 1(5), 80(2), and 82(2) of the Constitution rise to a sufficient level of foreseeability and precision in order to satisfy the criterion of âlawfulness of interferenceâ present in the general limitation clause of Article 53 of the Constitution (restriction of rights and freedoms only by law), which the Court did not explicitly mention. Compelling arguments can be made that the Court failed to consider the significance of the requirement of foreseeability for limiting political rights in the context of an election, which, as the European Court of Human Rights pointed out, creates âconsiderable uncertainty about the potential effects of the impugned legal provisionsâ (Magyar KĂ©tfarkĂș Kutya PĂĄrt v. Hungary, para. 116). Moreover, whereas Article 40(2) of the Constitution declares political parties and organizations that militate against democracy and rule of law unconstitutional, no similarly visible provision exists for presidential candidates and for the Court to limit their right to be elected on grounds of having militated against democracy and rule of law.
Be that as it may, the problematic reasoning behind Ruling no 2 does not affect Ruling no 32 on the annulment of the election. The Court guards the process of electing the President under Article 146(f) and is the warden of the (militant) democratic constitutional order. Article 2 of the Constitution mandates free, periodical and fair elections in Romania, while Article 81(1) specifies that the President âshall be elected by universal, equal, direct, secret and free suffrageâ. As mentioned above, this would not have been the case. Furthermore, Article 53(1) Law 370/2004 authorizes the Court to âannul elections if the voting and the determination of the results have been carried out by fraud of such a nature as to alter the allocation of the mandate, or [âŠ] the order of the candidates eligible to participate in the second round of elections.â
Final considerations
Unfortunately, the indelicate reasoning the Court employed in Ruling no 2 results in the very broad criteria of ârespecting the Constitutionâ and âdefending democracyâ as part of the procedure for electing Romaniaâs President, while also standing in stark contrast with very specific and innovative requirement on Romaniaâs EU and NATO membership. To be clear, additional protection for the Office of the President against dismantlers of democracy is welcomed. However, the broad criteria introduced in Ruling no 2 can easily be exploited to keep democratic opposition out of the race by a sycophantic Court in the future, if additional safeguards are not introduced.
In Romania, massive electoral fraud propelled antidemocratic forces to power once before. Soviet-backed communist forces achieved control over the political scene following the heavily vitiated 1946 election, abolishing the constitutional monarchy shortly thereafter. Henceforth, Ruling no 32 should serve as a basis for reflecting on the role of election annulment within militant democracyâs toolkit.
The post Romanian Militant Democracy in Action appeared first on Verfassungsblog.
- [link1] https://unser-mitteleuropa.com/corona-impfung-anklage-vor-internationalem-strafgerichtshof-wegen-verbrechen-gegen-die-menschlichkeit/
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- [link19] https://tkp.at/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/booster-6865787_1920.jpg
- [link20] https://tkp.at/2024/03/31/ostermaersche-und-warnungen-vor-dem-frieden/
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