Sat, Nov 21 2009
Photo: Economedia
Overall, the elections were generally in accordance with international standards, but further efforts were needed, observers say.
Whatever their final results in Bulgaria’s July 5 2009 parliamentary elections, some political personalities got the lion’s share of attention, perhaps not in all cases in ways that they would have preferred.
Doganisation and Galevisation entered Bulgaria’s political lexicon in the run-up to the July 5 2009 parliamentary elections.
By 5pm on July 5 2009, turnout was more than 46 per cent, with two hours to go - exceeding turnout in European Parliament elections in June.
Barometer Info survey on July 3 2009, just ahead of the eve of Bulgaria’s national parliamentary elections, gives GERB 27.05 per cent and Sergei Stanishev’s Coalition for Bulgaria 19.09 per cent.
GERB wants a victory in Bulgaria’s July 5 2009 elections that will enable it to rule alone, and will decline to form a government unless it achieves this or cannot make a coalition deal with the Blue Coalition, Boiko Borissov says.
The campaign for the July 5 elections was dominated by angry rhetoric but few ideas on how to run the country.
Five parties certain to make it to Parliament, with three others waiting in line, surveys say.
Gallup says voter turnout in Bulgaria’s national parliamentary elections could reach up to 60 per cent. In the country’s European Parliament elections in June 2009, it was just less than 40 per cent.
In the closing days of Bulgaria’s parliamentary elections campaign, the Bulgarian Socialist Party demonises Ivan Kostov; Boiko Borissov labels Sergei Stanishev a populist and for most right-wing politicians, Ahmed Dogan is demon-in-chief.
We are not leading a smear campaign, merely articulating the facts, Stanishev says
Borissov’s GERB holds firm lead over Stanishev’s socialist Coalition for Bulgaria, according to a survey published on June 30 2009.
The European Commission is taking Bulgaria to court for delays in providing Sofia with adequate waste disposal facilities.
James Warlick is the spouse of Mary Warlick, director of the office of Russian affairs at the US state department, who has been nominated to serve as ambassador to Serbia
Bulgaria’s Health Ministry announced on November 20 2009 that the flu epidemic declared two weeks earlier is at an end as rates of infection decline. The announcement coincides with reports of two deaths from A (H1N1) flu in Bulgaria.
Acting on allegations by Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria leader Ivan Kostov, prosecutors and Government officials are to probe deals by which Movement for Rights and Freedoms leader Ahmed Dogan acquired various properties.
Prosecutors allege that a deal agreed by the former defence minister caused losses of 12.9 million leva.