Bulgaria faces lengthy government-building talks or the prospect of
another vote, prolonging political instability in the European Union
member state that has been fuelled by distrust between the
pro-Western reformist party PP, which came second, and GERB, the
party of former prime minister Boyko Borissov.
The political impasse following an election last October, also won
by GERB, has already prevented parties from agreeing a 2023 state
budget and the current caretaker government has had to delay a
January 2024 target for Bulgaria to adopt the EU's euro currency.
Borissov said on Wednesday he would lead talks with all parties if
given the nod as expected by President Rumen Radev to be the first
to try to form a new government.
Election results after 100% of districts were counted show GERB won
26.5% of the vote, while PP, which has ruled out a coalition with
GERB, and its ally Democratic Bulgaria (DB) together received 24.5%.
"Bulgarians said that they cannot do without GERB, but they also
cannot do without PP and DB. Our personal feelings don't matter at
all," Borissov told a news conference.
"The only thing that this parliament should produce is a regular
government. Whatever the cost for the parties. Otherwise, new
elections mean the same."The nationalist Revival party, which is
sympathetic to Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Ukraine war
and opposes Bulgaria joining the euro, came third with 14.2% of the
vote.
Both Borissov and Kiril Petkov, PP's 42-year-old, Harvard-educated
leader, want Bulgaria, a NATO member albeit with close historic and
cultural ties to Russia, to maintain its pro-Ukraine stance in the
war.
But PP accuses GERB of presiding over rampant corruption in the EU's
poorest member state during their decade-long rule that ended in
April 2021, something that Borissov denies.
(Reporting by Stoyan Nenov, writing by Jason Hovet, editing by
Alexandra Hudson)
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