July 2021 Bulgarian parliamentary election

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July 2021 Bulgarian parliamentary election

11 July 2021

All 240 seats in the National Assembly
121 seats needed for a majority
Turnout41.63% (Decrease 7.47pp)
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
ITN Slavi Trifonov 24.08 65 +14
GERB–SDS Boyko Borisov 23.51 63 −12
BSPzB Korneliya Ninova 13.39 36 −7
DB A. Atanasov & H. Ivanov 12.64 34 +7
DPS Mustafa Karadayi 10.71 29 −1
ISMV Maya Manolova 5.01 13 −1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Stefan Yanev (caretaker)
Independent
(First Yanev Government)
Stefan Yanev (caretaker)
Independent
(Second Yanev Government)

Snap parliamentary elections were held in Bulgaria on 11 July 2021 after no party was able or willing to form a government following the April 2021 elections.[1] The populist party There Is Such a People (ITN), led by musician and television host Slavi Trifonov, narrowly won the most seats over a coalition of the conservative GERB and Union of Democratic Forces parties. Four other parties (the leftist BSP for Bulgaria, the liberal alliance Democratic Bulgaria, the centrist Turkish minority party Movement for Rights and Freedoms, and the anti-corruption Stand Up! Mafia, Get Out!) won seats in the 240-member Parliament as well.

ITN's success was propelled primarily by young voters. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) assessed the election as being "competitive" and with "fundamental freedoms being generally respected."[2] On 6 September, BSP handed back the last mandate of forming a government, meaning the parliament would be dissolved and a third parliamentary election would officially take place in 2021.[3] President Radev declared on 11 September that there would be '2-in-1' elections on November 14 for the first time in Bulgarian history, where voters will be able to vote for the president and the parliament. This decision was taken 'to save treasury costs and voters time'.[4]

The previous election in April saw the ruling GERB party win 75 seats, with 51 seats for There Is Such A People (ITN), 43 for BSP for Bulgaria, 30 for the Movement for Rights and Freedoms, 27 for Democratic Bulgaria and 14 seats for Stand Up! Mafia, Get Out!. After Boyko Borisov of GERB and Slavi Trifonov of There Is Such A People (ITN) were unable to form governments, the BSP stated that they would refuse the mandate to form the government, as the three anti-corruption parties (ITN, Democratic Bulgaria and ISMV) were unwilling to work with them.[1]

Electoral system

The 240 members of the National Assembly are elected by open list proportional representation from 31 multi-member constituencies ranging in size from 4 to 16 seats. The electoral threshold is 4% for parties, with seats allocated according to the largest remainder method.[5]

Parties and coalitions

Opinion polls

Campaign

During the buildup to the April election, Borisov sought to increase his party's share of the rural vote, making campaign stops at small villages in the Rhodope Mountains.[7] The April election showed a clear divide between rural and urban areas of the country; towns favored established parties, while Sofia and other cities went predominantly for new opposition parties, including ITN.[8] Reporters predicted these trends would influence the July election as well.[8]

Results

Aftermath

References

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