Former air force commander Rumen Radev was sworn in as Bulgaria’s new president on Thursday and said he would dissolve the parliament in a week’s time following the collapse of the centre-right government. Radev, a political newcomer who ran as an independent with the backing of the opposition Socialists, takes up his largely ceremonial post on Sunday after pledging to maintain Bulgaria’s position as a member of the European Union and NATO while also improving historically important ties with Russia. Radev’s decisive victory in November’s presidential race prompted the government of Boiko Borisov to resign, raising the prospect of prolonged political uncertainty in the Balkan nation and making an early parliamentary election virtually inevitable.
“You have one more week (until dissolution),” Radev told lawmakers, meaning that under Bulgaria’s constitutional rules the parliamentary election is likely to take place on March 26.
Political analysts say the parliamentary election, Bulgaria’s third since 2013, is again unlikely to produce a strong majority government able to implement the judicial, economic and other reforms they say the country needs.
Full Article: Russia-friendly Radev sworn in as Bulgaria’s president, set to dissolve parliament.