Could Bulgaria Face a 'Greek Scenario' After Adopting the Euro?
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“The Central Electoral Commission is in a Zeitnot situation, the entire process of ensuring machine voting is progressing at risk – we have no contracts concluded, no clarity whatsoever,” President Rumen Radev said as quoted by BGNES.
The Head of State uses the specific term of chess played for time that means a situation when the player has too little time to complete his moves. According to him, it is in such a situation that the electoral commission, increasingly pressed by time has to resolve the issue of machine voting enshrined in the law, but around which there is still too much ambiguity.
The Head of State recalled a meeting he had convened on the subject even before the one when, according to Rumen Radev, preparations for elections should have started back then.
"There is no decision of the Supreme Administrative Court with regard to the appeal, no contract has yet been signed, there are no clear-cut deadline for the delivery of the machines. There is also no established methodology for certification of these machines yet. There is no clear algorithm for how all political entities and public organizations will be able to participate in this certification process – software and hardware verification, storage control, transport and supervision of these machines", the Head of State reminded.
He also mentioned the need to train people handling machines, as well as the need for an information campaign for citizens.
According to Radev, the state is also slow in preparing a health protocol for the upcoming vote.
The presidential institution also insisted on considering amendments to the Electoral Code allowing smaller parties to participate on equal footing in election debates in public media, since in the context of the pandemic there is no way to conduct a "classic campaign" in which parties and sympathizers meet.
"Why not think about a higher quality and quantity of election debates", urged Deputy Prime Minister Iliana Yotova. /BGNES
On May 12, 2025, President Rumen Radev submitted a proposal to the 51st National Assembly of Bulgaria to hold a national referendum with the question: “Do you agree that Bulgaria should adopt the single European currency—the euro—in 2026?”
President Rumen Radev will begin consultations with parliamentary groups in the 51st National Assembly on December 10, according to the press office of the President.
The first session of the new parliament will resume today at 11 AM, announced the oldest member of parliament, Silvi Kirilov from "There Is Such a People," in the plenary hall.
With 88% of protocols processed, preliminary data indicates that nine parties and coalitions will enter Bulgaria's 51st National Assembly.
Preliminary results from the parallel vote count by Gallup International, conducted and funded by NOVA, reveal the following outcomes in Bulgaria's parliamentary elections:
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