Bulgarian voters are heading to the polling stations on Sunday for the sixth snap parliamentary election in three years. Analysts see little chance of it producing a stable coalition to end a prolonged period of political instability.
Bulgaria, the poorest member of the European Union and one of its most corrupt states, has faced revolving-door governments since anti-corruption protests in 2020 toppled a coalition led by the centre-right GERB party.
President Rumen Radev has appointed five caretaker governments since 2020 to steer the Black Sea nation. Successive, inconclusive elections have resulted in unstable coalitions that swiftly collapsed.
Bulgaria urgently needs a period of stable government to accelerate the flow of EU funds into its infrastructure and nudge it towards joining the euro and fully participating in Europe’s open-border Schengen area. Plans to join the eurozone have already been pushed back twice due to missed inflation targets.
Bulgaria and its northern neighbour Romania removed passport checks on March 31 for air and sea travellers departing for or arriving from the Schengen area. However, road and rail travellers still face checks.
Apathy is one of the main challenges in Sunday’s election. Bulgarian voters will also choose their representatives for the European Parliament. Many Bulgarians, distrustful of a political class they see as corrupt and inept, do not believe their votes will make any difference.
“I have decided firmly not to vote… I voted for a long time, but with so many alliances, I just don’t want to take part any more in such a circus,” said 71-year-old photographer Ivan Dobromirov.
Sunday’s election was triggered by the collapse in March of a coalition comprising GERB, which had held power for much of the previous 15 years, and the relatively new, reformist We Continue the Change (PP) party.
The two parties, both strongly pro-EU but divided by personal rivalries and distrust, said in March they could not form a new government without another election.
A poll released on Thursday by Sofia-based Alpha Research showed GERB leading with 25.1% and PP on 15.4%. The ultranationalist pro-Russian Revival party was seen getting 15.2%, and the Movement for Rights and Freedom, which mainly represents Bulgaria’s large ethnic Turkish minority, on 14.8%.
In a tight race, smaller parties, including the once-mighty Bulgarian Socialist Party and an alliance of agrarian and conservative parties called Blue Bulgaria, could influence the composition of the next government.
Mario Bikarski, a senior Eastern and Central Europe Analyst at risk intelligence company Verisk Maplecroft, said another snap parliamentary election in the autumn was probable.
“Even if a government is formed, it will likely struggle to serve a full term given disagreements between the various political forces,” he said.
With Inputs From Reuters