Romanians indeed love change, everything new it's good because it cannot get much worse. When the going get tough, the tough simply just does not get going, instead it is time to change everything, to forget what went wrong and move on. It is this simple mentality of sweep the garbage under the carpet that makes the main difference between a competitive free market economy and what we have here and now. Changing the poll system was promised to the people as the long awaited victory against corrupted politicians and other categories of undesirable leaders and the people bought it and believe it will be just as advertised. Practically this article analyses the Romanian electorate and the way in which it is prepared for the new poll system and ready to use its advantages in a proper manner. The amount of information about this particular system, the general pinion about it and the changes it will generate, the main benefits of its implementation are some of the main interests of the authors. Determining these factors can be a rather tricky task in a turbulent social environment such as the one specific to the Romanian electorate in general and the inhabitants of Bucharest in particular. Those unique characteristics are nothing more than the results of a troubled evolution in the last decades and, of course, of the mixture of different types of people generated by the economic gravitational phenomenon around the capital city. The diversity of inhabitants can be underlined by using a variety of classifications like ethnic affiliation, religion, origin (as in part of the country), nationality, education, income, qualification.., and this only strengthens up the old saying "no one is really from Bucharest". The impact of various media on the citizens strongly contributes to the information / misinformation regarding the new system, and the political factions are using the marketing research more often in order to have more and more efficient campaigns.