Bulgaria to hold fresh general election on July 11 - president
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[May 05, 2021]
By Tsvetelia Tsolova
SOFIA (Reuters) -Bulgaria will hold a snap
parliamentary election on July 11, after a third and final attempt to
form a government following April 4 polls that led to a fragmented
parliament failed, President Rumen Radev said on Wednesday.
Outgoing Prime Minister Boyko Borissov's centre-right GERB, which has
dominated Bulgarian politics over the last decade, again emerged as the
largest party after last month's election but it lost seats amid
widespread public anger over corruption in the European Union's poorest
member state.
With Borissov short of a majority and unable to forge a new coalition,
the president had asked a new anti-elite party led by TV host Slavi
Trifonov to do so but it also failed, as did the third largest party in
the new parliament, the Socialists.
"Bulgaria needs a strong-willed political alternative, which the current
parliament failed to produce," Radev said after the Socialist Party
returned the mandate to form a government.
The stalemate left Radev, a harsh critic of Borissov's failure to crack
down on graft, with no alternative but to appoint an interim technocrat
administration and call another snap election within two months.
The prolonged political uncertainty is unlikely to undermine Bulgaria's
prudent fiscal policies and its commitment to adopting the euro currency
due to a broad political consensus in Sofia on these issues, ratings
agency Fitch said on Tuesday.
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Bulgarian President Rumen Radev makes a statement announcing a
parliamentary snap election, in Sofia, Bulgaria, May 5, 2021.
REUTERS/Stoyan Nenov
Fitch, which rates Bulgaria at investment BBB grade
with a positive outlook, said that a protracted political deadlock
could delay reforms, needed for the efficient tapping of the EU's
750 billion euro coronavirus Recovery Fund.
CARETAKER GOVERNMENT
Radev linked the setting of the date for the new election with the
appointment of a new central electoral commission that is expected
to be finalised on May 11.
"Next week I will dissolve the parliament and appoint an interim
government. In this situation, the election is expected to be held
on July 11," Radev said in a live broadcast.
Radev said he plans to appoint experts as interim ministers,
including members of the Socialist Party, which has already said it
would back him in his own re-election bid in a presidential vote due
in the autumn.
The caretaker government will face a challenging agenda of managing
a health and economic crisis triggered by the coronavirus pandemic
within a tight budget it cannot amend and of ensuring a fair
election.
A recent opinion poll showed GERB remains the most popular party,
but its key rival, Trifonov's There Is Such a People, is a close
second, raising the prospect of continued fragmentation in which the
politicians will struggle to form a stable coalition government.
(Reporting by Tsvetelia Tsolova; editing by Gareth Jones)
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