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Former president Rumen Radev’s Progressive Bulgaria movement scored a landslide in Bulgaria’s snap parliamentary vote on April 19-20, 2026, with official counts showing about 44.7% of the vote after more than 90% of ballots were tallied.
That result puts the grouping on course to win roughly 130 of 240 seats, a rare single-party majority that could end five years of chronic instability and eight elections.
Main rivals pro-European GERB and the We Continue the Change–Democratic Bulgaria (PP‑DB) coalition trailed on roughly 13–15% each.
Turnout was materially higher than in recent contests, reflecting public anger after December anti‑corruption protests that toppled the previous government.
Radev, a former air force commander who resigned the presidency in January to run, is widely described as Russia‑friendly and has criticised EU green policy and direct military assistance to Ukraine, though he has said he would not veto EU aid packages.
Analysts predict a pragmatic government that may slow direct military support to Kyiv while seeking judicial reform and targeting corruption at home.
The vote revives hopes for durable governance in the EU and NATO member that joined the eurozone this year.
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Police action against vote‑buying and an uptick in turnout appear to have powered an anti‑corruption wave that delivered Radev a rare majority. Most local observers expect a pragmatic, domestically focused government that may temper Ukraine support but not break Bulgaria’s EU/NATO ties.







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