Gulf Times

Bulgaria centre-right, populists in election ‘photo finish’

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Former Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov’s centre-right party and a new populist party headed by singer-turned-politician Slavi Trifonov were neck-and-neck in exit polls published yesterday evening after polls closed in the country’s second parliament­ary election in three months.

Several exit polls projected that Trifonov’s There is Such a People (ITN) party would finish within one percent of Borisov’s GERB party.

Analyst Genoveva Petrova told the bTV station that the vote was heading for a “photo finish”.

Badly damaged after massive anti-corruption protests in summer 2020, GERB was isolated in a fragmented legislatur­e after the previous vote in April and failed to find partners to govern despite coming first.

Since then, the 62-year-old Borisov — a former bodyguard with a black belt in karate — has suffered a series of further blows from revelation­s by the interim cabinet about bad governance and allegation­s of corruption under his watch.

On top of that came unpreceden­ted US sanctions against Bulgarian oligarchs who, according to Borisov’s critics, were favoured during his time running the European Union’s poorest and most graft-ridden member state.

Borisov has denied any wrongdoing and, while heading to cast his vote yesterday, repeated accusation­s against the interim government of unfairly targeting him and said they had “sown chaos”.

Trifonov’s ITN rode public discontent to surge to a surprise second in April with 17.6%.

Turnout at 4pm local time (1300 GMT) stood at just 27.4%, down from 40% at the same time in April.

Pensioner Georgi Panichev, 67, said he was unhappy with the “excesses” of the current administra­tion and was voting for “stability”, an allusion to the veteran Borisov, whose political longevity has marked Bulgaria’s post-communist history.

Victoria Nikolova, 34, told AFP her priority was “changes in health, education, less corruption”.

Heading to vote with her two young daughters, she said she hoped “our children don’t emigrate when they grow up”.

Even if GERB manages to come first, “they will not govern” as other parties now snub them, political analyst Strahil Deliyski commented.

Trifonov’s ITN has already refused to work with either GERB, the opposition Socialists or the Turkish minority MRF, the traditiona­l parties of government.

Instead, it hopes to rely on the support of the parties that emerged from last summer’s protests — the right-wing Democratic Bulgaria, polling at 12%, and the left-wing Stand Up! Mafia Out, with 5-6%.

Trifonov himself is not running and has indicated he will not serve as prime minister.

“It’s time to finish what we started and change the model of governance entirely,” Trifonov said in a Facebook post, saying he hoped for a new administra­tion run by “young people, new faces”. The founder of Democratic Bulgaria, Hristo Ivanov, echoed this with a call to voters “turn a new page”.

If deadlock leads to yet another election, New Bulgarian University professor Antony Todorov told AFP that “voters will tire out, their support for democracy will erode,” with extremists standing to benefit.

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