The distribution of seats and the speech of the political parties that have the right to representation in the forty-ninth parliament that will be formed after the early general elections on April 2 in Bulgaria does not give hope for a way out of the political crisis.
BulgariaIn the fifth general election held in the last two years, from the political crisis Seems unable to pull it off.
The distribution of seats and the speech of the political parties that have the right to representation in the forty-ninth parliament that will be formed after the early general elections on April 2 in Bulgaria does not give hope for a way out of the political crisis.
In his first post-election statement to the press, Boyko Borisov, leader of Citizens for European Development in Bulgaria (GERB), which will have the largest group in parliament, asked for support for Continue Change-Bulgarian Democracy (PP-DB), which It will be the second largest authority in the new parliament, to form the government.
“If the GERB party fails to form a government, neither the budget nor the reforms will be adopted in this country,” Borisov said. Use the phrase.
Boyko Borissov announced that he was ready to hold talks with the anti-NATO, anti-EU, pro-Russian Vizrajdan (Rebirth) and Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP). Former Prime Minister “Everyone must take responsibility for the ongoing chaos in our country.” He said.
On the other hand, the Coalition for the Continuation of Democratic Change in Bulgaria has not evaluated the election results yet and announced that it will not agree to any government partnership with GERB before the elections.
Kostadin Kostadinov, leader of the Vizrajdane party, which would be the third largest power in parliament, stated that he could form an anti-NATO, anti-EU government, and that he expected support from other parties for such a government.
Political observers argue that the differences in the new six-party parliament could lead the country to a sixth rapid general election in a short time.
Observers expect that the two major powers, which have the ability to form a government, will not partner with parties that would harm their credibility before local elections in the fall in Bulgaria.
If no consensus is reached on the cabinet in parliament, general elections will be held for the sixth time in the last two years in Bulgaria.
After the April 2 elections, 6 parties and alliances entered Parliament
After the early general elections held on April 2, 6 parties and coalitions above the 4 percent threshold will be represented in the 240-member parliament.
The Central Election Commission (ZEC) reports that voter turnout in Bulgaria, where there are 6 million 600 thousand registered voters, is 40.63 percent.
Citizens for European Development in Bulgaria (GERB), led by former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, who ruled the country for 12 years until 2021, won the elections with 670,000 votes, by a margin of 26.51%.
The right-wing Continuous Change-Bulgarian Democratic Alliance (PP-DB) ranked second with 24.54 percent.
The pro-Russian populist Vizrajdan Party came in third with 14.15 percent.
The Movement for Rights and Freedoms (HÖH), whose members are mostly Turks and Muslims, got 13.72 percent with 346,437 votes. MRF will have the fourth largest group in Parliament.
The Pir Halk Var (ITN) party, which narrowly crossed the election threshold with 4.11 percent, also won the right to representation in parliament.
The Central Election Commission announced that it would announce the official results by April 6.
The names of the political groups and MPs who will participate in Parliament will also be announced on April 9.
constitutional action
Bulgarian President Rumen Radev is expected to set the date for the first session of the new parliament.
It is estimated that Radev will give a date after mid-April.
Parliament elects a speaker and a presidential council in its first session.
And then President Radev will negotiate with the parties represented in Parliament, giving the two largest parties the task of forming the government first.
Radev will assign one of the other parties the task of forming the government if these attempts fail.
If an agreement cannot be reached to form a coalition government in Parliament, the President will once again schedule an early general election.
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