Moldova's President Sandu nominates Vasile Tofan, a Ukraine-based banker and financier, as prime minister to replace the outgoing Alexandru Munteanu
Moldovan President Maia Sandu nominated businessman Vasile Tofan as prime minister on July 11 to replace Alexandru Munteanu, who resigned over disagreements with the ruling Party of Action and Solidarity majority; Tofan, a 44-year-old financier who backed Sandu in the 2024 presidential election, said his first priorities if confirmed by parliament would be advancing EU integration and reviving the economy
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Summary
Moldova's President Maia Sandu nominated Vasile Tofan as prime minister on July 11, tapping a 44-year-old financier and businessman based in Ukraine to lead the government. Tofan backed Sandu in the 2024 presidential election and her Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) in the 2025 parliamentary vote. He replaces Alexandru Munteanu, who resigned over differences with the PAS parliamentary majority. Sandu said, in a social media video, that Tofan's priorities should be EU integration, stronger state institutions, and economic revival. His nomination must be approved by parliament before he takes office. Armenpress noted that Tofan's residency in Ukraine is an unusual credential for a Moldovan prime minister.
The split
Arab News and Moldpres both led with the EU integration mandate. Armenpress stressed Tofan's Ukraine-based banking background, an angle that adds regional resonance given Moldova's proximity to the conflict and its EU candidate status. Bloomberg's headline called him an "investor", a framing that emphasises market credentials. No coverage from Russian-language outlets was available in the feed, leaving the counter-narrative about his Ukraine ties uncharted in this cycle.
By the numbers
- 44, Tofan's age at the time of nomination.
- 2024, the year Tofan publicly backed Sandu's presidential campaign.
- 2025, the year PAS won the parliamentary elections that gave Sandu's bloc its majority.
Why it matters
Moldova is an EU candidate country with a pro-European governing majority and an ongoing effort to reduce dependence on Russian energy and institutions. A new prime minister drawn from the business and banking world, with explicit EU integration as his mandate, signals continuity in Chisinau's western orientation. Munteanu's departure over internal disagreements with PAS suggests some friction within the governing bloc that a new appointment must contain.
What to watch
- Whether the Moldovan parliament confirms Tofan's nomination and on what timeline.
- How Tofan's Ukraine-based biography is framed in Russian-language political discourse about Moldova.
- Whether his economic background translates into specific policy moves on EU accession milestones and energy diversification.
- Reaction from opposition and from Russia, which has leverage through gas supply and Transnistria.