Peevski Promises a 'New Beginning' for Bulgaria After Zhelyazkov Cabinet Approval
Delyan Peevski, leader of the DPS-New Beginning, addressed the media following the approval of the Zhelyazkov cabinet in parliament
Nearly a week after the October 23 local and presidential elections in Bulgaria, allegations about violations and manipulations keep pouring in with demands for results' recall, voiced by a number of political formations.
The entire election and post-election process in the country can be described by one word – mess.
After the fiasco with the vote abroad, a number of Bulgarians ended up being deprived of their right to vote due to inconsistencies in the databases of the Directorate General of Civil Registration and Administrative Service (GRAO) and the Interior Ministry - the authorities confessed in the aftermath that a total of 12 000 eligible voters had been erroneously taken off electoral rolls over the residency clause.
Scores of Bulgarians waited in line for hours on Election Day, many puzzled by the complicated requirements for filling the ballots, at places tall almost as the height of the candidates. Voting sections were insufficient in numbers and inadequately staffed.
A more sinister nightmare unfolded after the closing of the polls, well into the following Monday with chaos erupting at Sofia's Municipal Electoral Commission (OIC), and at a number of other locations, when commissions from voting sections flocked to submit in their ballots and protocols.
In Sofia, the scene inside Universiada Hall, where documentation was collected, reminded of a refugee camp or the New Orleans Convention Center after hurricane Katrina hit the city in 2005 - starved and exhausted people, freezing outside in the cold or sleeping inside on bags filled with ballots...
Some took the ballots home; others abandoned them at locations all over the capital - pictures of torn bags and strewn all over ballots emerged.
Bulgaria's Central Electoral Commission (CEC) admitted that 35 election protocols from the mayor elections in Sofia are missing and have been filled in at OIC. It remains unclear why this happened or how the Commission retrieved the data.
The invalid ballots from both votes reached the unprecedented 6.4% (2.6% in 2006) of all ballots cast.
Some say the ruling GERB is the reason for all the mayhem for wanting to make sure it scores a certain victory. This, however, is highly unlikely – maybe Interior Minister and Head of GERB's Election Headquarters, Tsvetan Tsvetanov, or local GERB activists have been overzealous, but directives coming from Prime Minister, Boyko Borisov, seem unlikely - his ego points to becoming the winner on the white horse, not on claims of manipulations.
The answer lies in the flawed new Election Code with the mindboggling requirements, the usual shortage of funds, and mainly in the election authorities starting with CEC – understaffed, underpaid, incompetent and untrained, selected on political, not expert quotas.
This is what needs to be swiftly remedied, otherwise Bulgaria better relies on polling agencies in announcing election results.
To top it all, CEC finished the ballot count and announced the official results nearly two days beyond the legally set deadline, demonstrating once again that law in Bulgaria boils down to a mere recommendation.
If we look at history, there are not many cases in which relations between Bulgaria and Russia at the state level were as bad as they are at the moment.
The term “Iron Curtain” was not coined by Winston Churchill, but it was he who turned it into one of the symbols of the latter part of the twentieth century by using it in his famous Fulton speech of 1946.
Hardly anything could be said in defense of the new government's ideological profile, which is quite blurry; at the same time much can be disputed about its future "pro-European" stance.
Look who is lurking again behind the corner – the tandem of Advent International and Deutsche Bank, respectively the buyer of the Bulgarian Telecom Company in 2004 and the advisor of the Bulgarian government in the sweetest deal of the past decade, seem t
We have seen many times this circus which is being played out during the entire week and it only shows one thing - there is no need of a caretaker government in Bulgaria.
You have certainly noticed how many times President Rosen Plevneliev used the phrase “a broad-minded person” referring to almost every member of his caretaker government.
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