Chattanooga Times Free Press

Upstart party wins Bulgarian election with vow to fight graft

- BY SLAV OKOV

A new party pledging to stamp out endemic graft and organized crime in the European Union’s most corrupt nation won Bulgaria’s elections, according to independen­t counts, and it vowed to create a ruling coalition to end a more than year-long political crisis.

In the Balkan country’s third go at a parliament­ary ballot this year, the We’re Continuing the Change party, known as PP, defeated the Gerb party of former Premier Boyko Borissov, who until he was ousted in April was one of Europe’s longest-serving leaders and the dominant force in Bulgarian politics.

PP won 26.1%, compared with 23.5% for Gerb, according to the parallel count of ballots by Alpha Research based on a sample of results from voting machines. The Movement for Rights and Freedoms was third and the Socialists were fourth with 11.7% and 10.9% respective­ly. Tallies by three other pollsters showed similar outcomes, with partial official results expected to trickle in later on Sunday.

A victory by PP may break a political deadlock that has exacerbate­d the struggles of the EU’s poorest member, which has one of the bloc’s lowest COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates and one of the world’s highest pandemic death tolls on a per capita basis. It has also delayed the approval of badly needed recovery aid from the EU, which has kept the nation of 7 million outside of its passport-free Schengen zone due in part to endemic corruption.

PP co-founder Kiril Petkov declared victory and said the party will start talks with other groups that made it into parliament including Democratic Bulgaria and ITN, a party led by pop-folk star Slavi Trifonov. But it will exclude Gerb and MRF, he said.

“Our only conditions are we have to stop this corruption and we have to make this judicial system work,” said Petkov, who served in a previous interim government and will be his party’s nominee for prime minister.

Borissov said that if the official results show that Gerb won, he’ll lead talks. But he didn’t hold out much prospect of finding allies after other parties shunned him after the previous votes in April and July.

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