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Exit poll shows former President Radev’s party set to win Bulgaria election

Exit poll shows Rumen Radev's Progressive Bulgaria party winning 38.1 percent of the vote.

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Exit poll shows former President Radev’s party set to win Bulgaria election
Al Jazeera Source: Al Jazeera

Bulgaria’s former President Rumen Radev has hailed a “victory of hope” after his coalition topped the country’s parliamentary election, according to early official results.

Bulgarians cast their ballots on Sunday for the eighth time in five years, after mass protests led to the removal of the previous conservative government in December last year.

With more than 60 percent of ballots counted on Monday, the Central Election Commission said Radev’s Progressive Bulgaria (PB) coalition had won about 45 percent of the vote, enough for an outright majority of at least 132 seats in the 240-seat parliament.

The result placed PB well ahead of the liberal We Continue the Change-Democratic Bulgaria (PP-DB) coalition on 14.26 percent and former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov’s conservative GERB party on 13.01 percent.

“PB has won unequivocally – a victory of hope over distrust, a victory of freedom over fear,” Radev told reporters outside his party’s headquarters in Sofia.

Borissov congratulated Radev but cautioned that “winning elections is one thing, governing is another”.

Radev, a left-leaning eurosceptic, stepped down from the presidency in January, after nine years, to launch his bid to become prime minister. He had backed the anticorruption protests that saw hundreds of thousands of largely young people take to the streets in December, and promised to get rid of the “oligarchic governance model”.

“We will do everything possible not to allow us to go [to elections] again. It is ruinous for Bulgaria,” Radev told reporters after the exit poll was released. “We are ready to consider different options so that Bulgaria can have a regular and stable government.”

The Balkan country has seen fragmented parliaments in recent years, with coalitions failing to last more than a year since 2021.

Turnout exceeded 50 percent, the highest since April 2021, according to polling agency Market Links. Authorities had urged voters to cast ballots amid concerns over vote buying.

In recent weeks, police said they seized more than 1 million euros ($1.1m) in raids linked to vote buying and detained hundreds of people, including local councillors and mayors.

Radev has called for renewing ties with Moscow and criticised supplying Ukraine with weapons to fend off Russia’s invasion. He also opposed the 10-year defence agreement signed between Bulgaria and Ukraine in March, and has been accused by critics of being too pro-Russian.

Bulgaria’s election comes in the wake of Viktor Orban’s defeat in Hungary last week after 16 years in power. The right-wing prime minister lost to Peter Magyar’s centre-leaning opposition Tisza party, which swept 70 percent of the seats in parliament.

Bulgaria joined the European Union in 2007 and adopted the euro as its currency in January this year.

Al Jazeera

Originally published at

Al Jazeera

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