New 'Greatness' Party Joins Bulgaria's Fragile Government as Budget Talks Intensify
Boyko Borissov, leader of GERB, stated that the Bulgarian government has been fragile from the outset and has grown even more fragile in recent times
Bulgaria's Parliament is to vote on the cancellation of the Public-Private Partnership Act as inoperative on Friday.
The Public-Private Partnership Act took effect in early 2013.
Bulgaria's current government finds that the piece of legislation is inoperative, unnecessary and restrictive, according to reports of dnevnik.bg.
The proposal of the government that the Public-Private Partnership Act be cancelled triggered prolonged debates which started on Friday.
The cancellation was opposed by center-right party GERB (Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria).
GERB MP Krasimir Tsipov inquired how the authorities had managed to complete the evaluation of the Act within such a short period of time.
He insisted that the existing Public-Private Partnership Act provided clear rules on transparency for such projects, adding that its revocation would reintroduce schemes which had existed 10-15 years ago which had the sole purpose of paving the way for the looting of public property.
Bulgarian Parliament Speaker Mihail Mikov claimed that the government had taken too long to cancel the Act.
He suggested that the Public-Private Partnership Act was a mere compilation of the Obligations and Contracts Act, the Concessions Act, and the Public Procurement Act.
He reminded that Pavel Shopov from nationalist party Ataka had referred to this piece of legislation as Public-Private Pillaging Act because its goal had been to regulate the allocation of public money to private projects.
The Bulgarian government has announced the removal of 8 projects from the Recovery and Resilience Plan (RRP)
Bulgaria considers the construction of the 7th and 8th units of the Kozloduy Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) a strategically important project for ensuring the country's energy security
Bulgaria has launched a significant international advertising campaign aimed at promoting the country as a premier destination for congress, culinary, and wine tourism
In recent years, food prices in Bulgaria have become a key issue in both public and political discussions
Over the past six years, more than 108,000 workers from 65 different countries have come to Bulgaria for employmen
Eurozone nations have expressed their support for Bulgaria’s progress toward adopting the euro
Bulgaria's Perperikon: A European Counterpart to Peru's Machu Picchu
Bulgarians Among EU's Least Frequent Vacationers, Struggling with Affordability