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Published on
Sunday, April 19, 2026 at 07:07 PM
Bulgaria’s Ruling Carousel Spins Again

Bulgaria’s Progressive Bulgaria movement, led by former President Rumen Radev, took a strong lead in the country’s parliamentary election on Sunday, April 19, 2026, according to exit polls, in a vote that was the country’s eighth parliamentary election in five years and another turn in a long political crisis marked by repeated elections, anti-corruption protests and weak governments.

A Country Kept in Permanent Election Mode

The latest round of voting offered no clean break from the churn. Exit polls gave Progressive Bulgaria varying levels of support, with one poll showing 39.2%, another putting the party at 38.9%, and a third projecting 37.5%. Other reports said the party was around 38% to 39%, while one outlet described the result as an emphatic win and another said Radev’s bloc was far ahead. The center-right GERB party of Boyko Borissov was projected at 15.1% in one poll, around 15% in another, and about 16% in another, while the liberal PP-DB coalition was projected at about 14% or between 13% and 14%.

The numbers point to a political system stuck in a loop, with parties trading places while the underlying machinery of rule keeps grinding on. Bulgaria, the EU’s poorest member, has been gripped by a political crisis since 2021, when the conservative government of Boyko Borissov was toppled amid anti-corruption rallies. Since then, fragmented parliaments have produced weak governments, none of which survived more than a year before being brought down by street protests or backroom deals in parliament.

Radev, who resigned as president in January 2026 to run for government leadership, said after the initial projections that “we will do our best to prevent having to go to the polls” again. He said, “It (new election) will be a disaster for Bulgaria,” and added, “It would mean going from crisis to crisis when what we have to do is work very hard to emerge from these crises.” He also said, “We are ready to consider different options so that Bulgaria can have a regular and stable government,” and, “We will do everything possible not to allow us to go (to elections) again. It is ruinous for Bulgaria.”

Vote Buying, Police Raids and the Machinery of Control

After voting, Radev urged people to take part in the election, saying mass voting was “the only way to drown vote-buying in a sea of free votes.” He also said Bulgaria had “a historic chance to break once and for all with the … oligarchic model” and called for a “democratic, modern, European Bulgaria.” At campaign rallies, he vowed to “remove the corrupt, oligarchic model of governance from political power.” He has also said he wants to rid the country of its “oligarchic governance model.”

The vote took place under the usual pressure of managed democracy. Political parties had called on Bulgarians to vote to curb vote buying, and police seized more than €1m in raids against vote buying in recent weeks and detained hundreds of people, including local councillors and mayors. By 4 p.m. local time, nationwide turnout had reached nearly 35%, according to electoral officials, while one exit poll put turnout at 43.4%. Another report said turnout was expected to be higher than the 39% participation in the 2024 election, and one said turnout had slumped to 39% in the last election in 2024.

Polling stations opened at 7 a.m. local time, or 0400 GMT, and closed at 8 p.m. local time, or 1700 GMT. The country has a population of 6.5 million. Preliminary results were expected on Monday.

Who Gets to Call It Stability

Radev, 62, was described as a former air force general, former fighter pilot and air force commander, and as a former president for nine years before stepping down in January. He led the newly formed center-left Progressive Bulgaria grouping, which was described as left-leaning, center-left, pro-Russia, Russia-friendly and, by critics, pro-Russian. He has advocated renewing ties with Russia, opposed military aid to Ukraine, denounced a 10-year defence agreement signed last month between Bulgaria and Ukraine, and said he would not use Bulgaria’s veto to block EU aid to Kyiv. He has officially denounced Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. He also opposes the EU’s green energy policy, which he called naive “in a world without rules.”

Borissov, who has served three terms as Bulgaria’s prime minister and headed the country virtually uninterrupted for close to a decade, cast his vote in Bankya, on the outskirts of Sofia, and said he did not see who GERB could enter a coalition with. He said GERB would not enter any coalitions and would instead act as constructive opposition and take part in topics related to geopolitics, such as national defense. He also said GERB had an “extremely pro-European position,” underlining its support for Ukraine and Brussels, and during the campaign said the party had “fulfilled the dreams of the 1990s,” including Bulgaria joining the eurozone this year. Borissov dismissed suggestions that Radev brought something “new.”

One report said Radev arrived at his group’s headquarters shortly before polling stations closed and was greeted with applause by his team. Bulgaria is a member of the European Union and NATO, and it joined the eurozone on January 1 shortly after entering the border-free Schengen travel area.

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