According to the INSCOP Research barometer, made between 20-26 June, 75%of the interviewees agree with the statement ‘ I love Romania and I am proud of my country’, 13.2% partially agree,4.7% neither agree, nor disagree, 2.6% are in partial disagreement and 3.1% in total disagreement,1.4% do not know or do not answer. PSD (social-democrat party)voters and people over 45 agree with this statement more than other groups. Young people under 30 disagree with the statement in particular. 21.3% of the respondents strongly agree with the statement "Romania offers a future for my children and future generations", 29.1% partly agree, 10.5% neither agree nor disagree. 11.3% partly disagree, 25.1% strongly disagree. 2.8% do not know or do not answer. PSD and PNL voters, the inhabitants of big urban environment and state employees agree with the statement in a larger proportion than the other categories of population. They express their disagreement with the given statement especially the AUR voters and the inhabitants of small urban environment. 75.1% of respondents strongly agree with the statement "Romania is my country and I don't want to leave it", 12.3% partially agree, 3.8% neither agree nor disagree. 2.6% partially disagree and 5.3% strongly disagree. 1.0% do not know or do not answer. A higher proportion of PSD voters agree with the given statement than the other population groups. Young people under 30, AUR and USR voters in particular disagree with the statement. "The Informat.ro - INSCOP Research Barometer shows a complex picture of patriotic perceptions in Romania. On the one hand, the general patriotic sentiment is strong, with the overwhelming majority of respondents (88.2%) stating that they love Romania and are proud of their country. On the other hand, optimism about the future of future generations is much more tempered, with only 50.4% of respondents expressing partial or total agreement with the idea that Romania offers a future for their children and future generations. There is a dissonance between the emotional attachment to the country and the perception of socio-economic prospects, reflected by the 36.4% who believe that Romania does not offer a future for their children. In terms of their intention to stay in the country, over 75% of Romanians say they do not want to leave, but this percentage drops significantly among young people (18-29 years old), signalling the potential for a generational exodus. Analysis by demographic profile reveals notable differences: rural people and the elderly are more attached to the country, while in large urban areas and the 18-29 age group there is a higher degree of uncertainty and disagreement. From a political point of view, there are differences between the parties' voters: 80% of PNL voters believe that Romania offers a future for their children, a view shared by 69% of PSD voters, 54% of USR voters and only 39% of AUR voters", says Remus Stefureac - director of INSCOP Research. The data were gathered between 20 and 26 June 2025 on the basis of interview through questionnaire. The data were gathered through the CATI method (phone interviews), the volume of the sample, stratified being 1,150 people, representative for the significant socio-demographic categories (sex, age, occupation) for the non-institutionalised population of Romania, aged 18 or more. Maximum admitted error for the data is +/- 2.9% at the trust degree of 95%.