Bulgarians vote in third election this year in bid to break deadlock | Inquirer News

Bulgarians vote in third election this year in bid to break deadlock

/ 11:27 AM November 14, 2021

bulgaria election

 A man pastes election posters in Haskovo, Bulgaria, November 8, 2021. Picture taken November 8, 2021. REUTERS FILE PHOTO

SOFIA — Bulgarians vote on Sunday in their third parliamentary election this year, with opinion polls pointing to another inconclusive result that could hamper efforts to tackle high energy prices, a jump in COVID-19 cases and widespread corruption.

Another failure to break a prolonged political impasse and forge a functioning cabinet in the European Union’s poorest member state could also potentially slow plans for the country to adopt the euro by 2024.

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An election for the largely ceremonial post of president will also be held on Sunday. Polls show incumbent Rumen Radev, 58, is poised to win re-election for a second five-year term after a likely run-off vote on Nov. 21.

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Bulgaria has been gripped by political uncertainty since April, when an election ended the decade-long rule of former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov and his centre-right GERB party following massive anti-graft protests against him last year.

Policy differences and rivalry prevented his opponents, the so-called parties of change, from forging a ruling coalition after the April election and another ballot in July.

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GERB has seized on the deadlock, rising energy costs and a rise in COVID-19 cases and deaths in the EU’s least vaccinated country – helping it bolster support among party loyalists.

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The latest polls give the party backing of 24%, putting it on track to be the biggest in parliament.

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But Borissov, 62, a burly former bodyguard of late Communist dictator Todor Zhivkov, is unlikely to find allies to forge a coalition, analysts say.

A new centrist party pledging “zero corruption”, set up by two Harvard-educated former interim ministers, is seen as having the biggest chance of steering talks for a new administration with two other anti-graft factions and the Socialists.

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Called “We Continue the Change”, the new party appears tied with the Socialists for second position, both with support of about 15-16%.

“For the time being, a government around the so-called parties of change, and the Socialists, looks more likely,” said analyst Dobromir Zhivkov at the Market Links pollster.

Ivailo Mihailov, a 52-year-old engineer, said he hoped Sunday’s election would yield a ruling coalition to address high-level graft in the country – ranked the most corrupt EU member state by Transparency International.

“The judicial system is the biggest problem or rather the lack of justice,” he said. “Until we have a politician and leading businessman actually sentenced, nothing good will happen.”

Thousands of Bulgarians joined street protests in mid-2020, accusing Borissov of cosying up with the chief prosecutor to benefit local oligarchs and businesses close to his GERB party.

Borissov denies any wrongdoing.

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Polls open at 7 a.m. (0500 GMT) and close at 8 p.m. (1800 GMT).

TAGS: Bulgaria, Elections

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