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Bulgarians back to polls for fresh vote

Tsvetelia TsolovaAAP
Bulgaria is voting again after an April election resulted in a fragmented parliament.
Camera IconBulgaria is voting again after an April election resulted in a fragmented parliament. Credit: AP

Bulgarians have begun voting in a parliamentary election that will decide whether protest parties can form the next government after a decade of political dominance by long-serving premier Boyko Borissov.

The vote on Sunday will be the Balkan country's second in three months, after an April election resulted in a fragmented parliament that failed to produce a government, underscoring deep divisions in Bulgaria over the legacy of Borissov's rule.

His centre-right GERB party appears tied with new anti-establishment There Is Such a People party of TV host Slavi Trifonov at about 20-22 per cent each, with opinion polls giving a tiny edge to the latter.

Even if GERB manages to nudge ahead, Borissov, 62, a former bodyguard of late Communist dictator Todor Zhivkov, is unlikely to find allies to forge a coalition amid public anger over entrenched corruption, analysts say.

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"I think we are seeing the end of the Borissov era," said Parvan Simeonov, political analyst with Sofia-based Gallup International.

"People have got tired of his overbearing style of governing and his 'man of the people' approach. And they have really got fed up with all these allegations of corruption."

Support for ITN and two smaller anti-graft groupings, Democratic Bulgaria and Stand Up! Mafia Out!, has risen since April. But ITN and its potential partners may struggle to form a government without the support of some of the traditional parties.

"Young people continue to leave for abroad. Corruption is suffocating any business initiative. Something has to change," 38-year-old engineer Nikolay Galabov said after casting his vote in Sofia.

The protest parties, who want to foster close ties with Bulgaria's allies in NATO and the European Union, have promised to revamp the judiciary to cement the rule of law and ensure proper use of hefty funds due to pour in as part of the EU's coronavirus recovery package.

The EU's poorest state, Bulgaria has had a long history of corruption, but a number of recent scandals and the imposition of US sanctions last month against several Bulgarians for alleged graft have dominated the campaign.

The current interim government has accused Borissov's cabinet of spending billions of levs of taxpayer money without transparent procurement procedures among other shortcomings.

GERB denies wrongdoing and says such accusations are politically motivated. The interim cabinet was appointed by President Rumen Radev, a strong critic of Borissov, after the inconclusive April election.

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