Weary Bulgarians go to polls for fifth time in two years


Sofia, April 2 (BNA): Bulgarians will vote Sunday in their fifth parliamentary elections in two years, amid mounting dissatisfaction with political elites that many see as unwilling to tackle illicit corruption and economic reforms.

Polls show that the vote is likely to leave Bulgaria without a functioning parliamentary majority again, raising questions about its ambitions to join the eurozone in the near term and use EU aid to recover from the novel coronavirus.

Voting begins at 7 a.m. local time (04:00 GMT) and ends at 8 p.m., according to Reuters.

Riding the competition is a coalition of the centre-right GERB party of former prime minister Boyko Borissov, 63, and his junior partner in the Union of Democratic Forces (SDS), as well as the newly created pro-Western coalition. The Party of Change (PP) and the Reformist Democratic Party of Bulgaria (DB).

“Regardless of which comes first, it doesn’t solve the big question – what are the prospects for forming a government,” said Genoveva Petrova of Alpha Research.

Petrova added that “the parties in Bulgaria have four provisional parliaments to realize that there is no political force at the moment that not only has an absolute majority, but has a large enough advantage to set the agenda.”

The two coalitions are choppy in the polls, with the latest by Exacta Research Group showing them at 26.2% and 25.6% respectively, and the National Ennahda Party at 12.8%.

Complicating the coalition-building process are accusations by several of his political opponents that Borisov did not do enough to stem corruption in the country during his decade-long rule that ended in 2021, which Borisov denies.

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