Why Bulgaria is Headed for its 7th Election in 3 Years

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  • čas přidán 6. 07. 2024
  • Buy a copy of Too Long: www.toolong.news
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    Last month, Bulgaria held its sixth election in just three years, but its long running political crisis is far from over. So in this video, we'll explain why these constant elections and they've struggled to form a stable coalition government.
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    //////////////////////
    1 - www.statista.com/statistics/8...
    2 - www.politico.eu/article/ivan-...
    3 - www.politico.eu/article/bulga...
    4 - www.euractiv.com/section/poli...
    5 - theloop.ecpr.eu/bulgaria-turb...
    00:00 Introduction
    01:02 Context
    02:33 Bulgaria’s Political Crisis
    05:48 The Most Recent Election
    07:50 Too Long

Komentáře • 731

  • @user-uw5ps6nr8g
    @user-uw5ps6nr8g Před 3 dny +695

    Bulgaria being stable for once challenge IMPOSSIBLE

    • @user-uf4rx5ih3v
      @user-uf4rx5ih3v Před 3 dny +15

      Bulgarian politics has been decently stable in the last 20 years, so this comment doesn't make sense. Not saying things were going well but instability was not the issue.

    • @HalfLifeHalfDead
      @HalfLifeHalfDead Před 3 dny +9

      Literally hasn't been an issue since 1997, with one exception in 2014.

    • @NikolaKrotev
      @NikolaKrotev Před 3 dny +17

      @@user-uf4rx5ih3vWhat are you even saying? Stable going down, like titanic stable sinkage.
      For the last 3 years Bulgaria is barely moving forward precisely because the top is shaking. Personally I hope for 6 more elections those next 3 years and get rid of the bad blood bit by bit.

    • @user-gq8rw6hf9v
      @user-gq8rw6hf9v Před 3 dny +1

      Zhikov made bulgaria stable

    • @Edge50199
      @Edge50199 Před 3 dny +4

      Compare to all other Balkan countries we are probably the most stable country here.

  • @thepax2621
    @thepax2621 Před 3 dny +438

    Everyone expects Bulgaria's politics to be "insane" , even if they don't know the details.
    "Sane" politics would be newsworthy 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @paulluka2029
    @paulluka2029 Před 3 dny +390

    At this rate Bulgarian political parties will depress voters until only those running for seats are doing the voting.

  • @navinvent
    @navinvent Před 3 dny +194

    USA: Oh no we are having our once every 4 year election, this is is so Tense
    Bulgaria: Amateurs.

    • @boyanpenev9822
      @boyanpenev9822 Před 2 dny +14

      Luckily for everyone, no one is truly worried about what happens to elections in Bulgaria. As the old Soviet era joke went (admittedly, the original is about Mongolia): "We're the most independent country in the world, because nothing depends on us!"

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem +1

      ​@@boyanpenev9822 Lol, good one. 🤭 Could apply to many countries tbf

    • @SouvenTudu1
      @SouvenTudu1 Před 21 hodinou

      😂

  • @mihailrangelov8343
    @mihailrangelov8343 Před 3 dny +144

    The most interesting thing about this whole debacle is that the country has performed quite well economically during the last 3 years. It turns out that Bulgaria runs well without a government.

    • @naydennaydev7071
      @naydennaydev7071 Před 3 dny +32

      apparently better than when with a government 😀

    • @roxader4299
      @roxader4299 Před 3 dny +38

      It is doing well only on paper. Once you leave the big cities, the countryside is a wasteland.

    • @skillerbg
      @skillerbg Před 3 dny +6

      Maybe because temporary goverments of experts is apointed between the elections. Maybe they are doing good job, despite not having long term goals.

    • @Edge50199
      @Edge50199 Před 3 dny +4

      It doing well by KPI but in reality all major projects are frozen, roads are barely supported, we cannot obtain the post-covid economic boost package yet, while all our neighbours are progressing significantly in the last 3 years.

    • @milaenlommer9732
      @milaenlommer9732 Před 2 dny +11

      @@roxader4299 So what? People are moving to the bigger cities for better opportunities leading to higher urbanisation. What’s the issue with that? We’re moving from agriculture-based economy to a service-based economy, so the countryside is emptying out. We have been added to the World Bank’s list of high income countries for the first time and it makes sense. As a young person from a mid-size Bulgarian city my living standards have improved dramatically in my lifetime.

  • @tsvetangeorgiev
    @tsvetangeorgiev Před 3 dny +190

    "the mafia kingpin" - I could not say it better even if i tried

    • @lexus8018
      @lexus8018 Před 12 hodinami

      Eastern european parties be like:
      Mafia disguised as either right wing conservative or social democrat
      Useless green party
      Liberals that only city dwellers vote for
      Ultra pro EU fail party that gets 2 seats on average
      Minority party that never breaks the 5% vote limit
      Christian democrats (new free holidays if in power)
      3 different flavours of Euro sceptic nazis

  • @explosivereactionstv7414
    @explosivereactionstv7414 Před 3 dny +322

    “Oh my freaking God, again?” - me seeing the title

    • @asheiou
      @asheiou Před 3 dny +6

      "haven't I watched this video before?"

    • @fanta-cool7532
      @fanta-cool7532 Před 3 dny +2

      @@asheiou "What do you mean you've watched it, its brand new!"

    • @iordanvassilev8091
      @iordanvassilev8091 Před 3 dny +3

      "OH, my freaking God, HOW IS THIS SO BAD!", me, living through it

    • @asentseto
      @asentseto Před 3 dny +1

      Don’t use the name of God in vain!

    • @asheiou
      @asheiou Před 3 dny

      @@asentseto god lighten up

  • @sejarahnow4991
    @sejarahnow4991 Před 3 dny +298

    TLDR team is on fire: covering 12 elections in one year 🔥

    • @AJCrowley0153
      @AJCrowley0153 Před 3 dny +52

      And then they have to do the rest of the world beyond Bulgaria too

    • @JamesL42
      @JamesL42 Před 3 dny

      If only they could do it with less libshit bias.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 Před 3 dny +2

      @@AJCrowley0153 Fingers crossed for Senegal, that one’s a doozy.

    • @StrelecaTV
      @StrelecaTV Před 3 dny +3

      Regardless the country institutions still work , I think we got used to it , so one could say we have no absolute concentrated powers in one person and democracy truly is working ? 😅

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem

      ​@@AJCrowley0153 😂😂

  • @radatzaneva6457
    @radatzaneva6457 Před 3 dny +93

    It's worth mentioning also that despite EU's criticisms of Bulgaria's corruption issue, Ursula von der Leyen personally came to Bulgaria to lend support to GERB-SDS in the run up to the latest elections. GERB-SDS is a member of EPP so apparently a political group's interests supersede principles.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Před 3 dny +8

      Sounds similar to Fidesz in Hungary.

    • @radatzaneva6457
      @radatzaneva6457 Před 3 dny +3

      @@souvikrc4499 very much so

    • @vkoptchev
      @vkoptchev Před 3 dny +4

      Sad, but true. These young guys prove the situation here is clearly visible from the outside, if one wants to see it.

    • @Edge50199
      @Edge50199 Před 3 dny

      Ursula is more corrupt than FIdesz and Gerb-sds combined. Just because they don't have institution to observe EU doesn't mean they are not severely corrupt organization.

    • @avio1381
      @avio1381 Před 2 dny +3

      When did she support GERB-SDS? Source?

  • @nailets
    @nailets Před 3 dny +193

    As I Bulgarian it breaks my heart that we made it to the world news... Also the main problem in my opinion is that only 36% of the population even votes. The situation is much worse than you think. People lost faith...

    • @Nezuchan07
      @Nezuchan07 Před 3 dny

      Go Back to
      Classic Democracy
      Stop voting for Gayrine Dickpen

    • @krassendimitrov9747
      @krassendimitrov9747 Před 3 dny +19

      How can you not lose hope, every Party says they are gonna do something but do something entirely different, I used to care a lot about voting and democracy, but now it's like, what's the point?

    • @odenat3701
      @odenat3701 Před 3 dny +16

      I think Bulgaria have much bigger problems, the population decrease is one of them. I visited Bulgaria a few years ago, even turkish towns who you expect making more children were empty of people. Since 1990 Bulgarian population decreased by 25%. How can you be a stable country when every young people tries to go to Western Europe?

    • @SwordQuake2
      @SwordQuake2 Před 3 dny

      @@odenat3701 it's the other way round. Young people want to leave because the rest keep voting for the mafia.

    • @christos.5302
      @christos.5302 Před 3 dny +16

      Lost faith in what lol. The political system depends on the people, it represents them. If they can't find a representative that's not a political problem, that's a problem of every citizen. And Im saying this as a Bulgarian.

  • @Steve-nuru88
    @Steve-nuru88 Před 3 dny +162

    Belgium s Record has been beaten

  • @ebermtheburn
    @ebermtheburn Před 3 dny +54

    I did a study about disillusionment with democracy in Europe, Bulgaria made the top 3 in every metric when it came to the countries whos citizens are most disillusioned with democracy and don't trust their institutions.

    • @krisnikolaev6560
      @krisnikolaev6560 Před 2 dny +3

      yeah, you see that on a daily basis over here. the depressing part is that this is also fairly prevalent among the younger generation.

    • @RottenChain
      @RottenChain Před 2 dny

      what kind of democracy is this if your judicial system is held by the mafia? We have not been in democracy in the first place, let alone be disillusioned with it

    • @GabrurTrufonov
      @GabrurTrufonov Před dnem +2

      As a Bulgarian we should be top 1

  • @ivobel721
    @ivobel721 Před 3 dny +223

    I'm Bulgarian, and this video is quite accurate.
    The ГЕРБ-ДПС (GERB-DPS) proposed government is being voted on today (3 July 2024) and is expected to fail. It's not completely certain that we'll have new elections because ИТН (ITN, There is Such a People) or Величие (Velichie, Greatness) might end up supporting some sort of government.
    The decrease of voter turnout is mainly because many voters felt betrayed by the coalition between ГЕРБ (GERB) and the reformist parties ПП-ДБ (PP-DB) and they didn't go to the polling stations. ДПС (DPS, the Turkish party) have a more or less fixed electorate support, and even though their votes barely changed, they got more seats due to the low turnout.

    • @Pyxlean
      @Pyxlean Před 3 dny +11

      Избирателната активност падна доста още през юли 2021. Просто проблема е, че огромна част от населението няма никакво доверие в НС и като цяло в цялата политическа система.
      Май ще ходя да живея в Гърция.

    • @jurgnobs1308
      @jurgnobs1308 Před 3 dny +20

      yea... my wife used to make sure she makes it to the bulgarian embassy in switzerland for every election because it was very important to her. but she hasnt been doing it in the recent few.

    • @goatgamer001
      @goatgamer001 Před 3 dny +2

      ​@@PyxleanCool. Have fun in Greece

    • @BalkanSlav
      @BalkanSlav Před 3 dny +12

      They were were wrong about no one forming a government after the NOV 2021 elections. PP (We continue the change) managed to form a government trough an unheard of (at least in Bulgaria) 4 party coalition with BSP, ITN and DB. Though the government was toppled after 9 months by ITN leaving the coalition due to the lift of the VETO for accession of Macedonia into the EU. So with that and the rotational government of PP+DB with GERB and support from DPS (for constitutional amendments), PPDB were the only party/coalition that was able to form governments in the last years and both times they were toppled mainly by GERB, DPS, Revival (Vazrazhdane) and ITN.

    • @VladTaushanov
      @VladTaushanov Před 3 dny +6

      Part of the reason for the low voter turnout is that the election was held in summer and many people were on holiday.
      But most just couldn't be bothered because they don't think elections make a difference. Which is precisely what these people want you to think.

  • @user-hj1wu7wb7o
    @user-hj1wu7wb7o Před 3 dny +34

    Been there done that, sorry for you Bulgaria.
    We had 5 elections between 2019-2023 in Israel, including during the hight of COVID19. Netanyahu was just starting his corruption trial, there was supposed to be a rotational government between Netanyahu and Ganz, but of course Netanyahu dissolved the Knesset after just a few months. Then, we had an 8 parties government with capitalists, socialists, liberals, religious zionists and islamists. We had a prime minister with 6 seats (out 120 seats in the parliament). Now Netanyahu is "leading" the worst government ever.
    I'm waiting to see him in Hague.

    • @user-xi5ej4ox5s
      @user-xi5ej4ox5s Před dnem

      WTF islamists are doing in ISRAELI pairlament?

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem +1

      It has been rough for Israel... really rough. You think he committed war crimes?

    • @faceofdead
      @faceofdead Před 21 hodinou

      It's a dictate under Netanyahu, no different than Putin's Russia

  • @ma6inka
    @ma6inka Před 3 dny +23

    As a Bulgarian - this is quite a good summary, good job !

  • @thepax2621
    @thepax2621 Před 3 dny +104

    They just made a bet with Belgium 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @XD-bx6ee
      @XD-bx6ee Před 3 dny +13

      yh but Bulgaria isn't even close to being as divided as Belgium is

    • @FYTJ
      @FYTJ Před 3 dny

      And Belgium isn’t even close to being as corrupt as Bulgaria is

    • @somebelgiandude7855
      @somebelgiandude7855 Před 2 dny

      @@XD-bx6eesurprisingly after the recent election it seems the new government formation in Belgium will be the smoothest one in a while. It can take more than a year to form a government in Belgium, it hasn’t even been a month and the parties are complaining that it’s not going fast enough.
      Edit: or rather we have progress after less than a month which is super rare.

  • @piccalillipit9211
    @piccalillipit9211 Před 3 dny +150

    *I LIVE IN BULGARIA* they like elections - its a national pastime, you get a holiday for each one. EDIT this is incorrect - they stop alcohol sales
    BUT being serious - this country runs better with NO government than the Uk under the Tories - 5% GDP growth this year, 4 new hospitals in my city alone, 2 new free universities, amazing public transport, public toilets are better than most UK 4* hotels. And its 33ºC today

    • @Khantia
      @Khantia Před 3 dny +40

      Yeah, Bulgaria is also worse when it has a government :P

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Před 3 dny +6

      @@Khantia Yeah Id go along wiht that LOL

    • @rafanadir6958
      @rafanadir6958 Před 3 dny

      Which is that?

    • @EmergingEcho
      @EmergingEcho Před 3 dny +28

      @@piccalillipit9211 I am Bulgarian from Burgas and what you describe is only in the Burgas region. The rest of the country looks like Mariupol before the reconstruction.

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Před 3 dny +11

      @@EmergingEcho Ive travelled the whole country and I didn't see that

  • @user-yu3er9ve1g
    @user-yu3er9ve1g Před 3 dny +70

    The situation in Bulgaria is extremely dangerous for the entire EU and NATO, but it is often not understood. The economic stagnation and lack of development leads to severe disappointment among the Bulgarians, and this can break this country away from Europe and NATO. It will be a geopolitical disaster for the entire southern flank of NATO and the EU. Russia does not accidentally call Bulgaria the "gateway to the Balkans". A rupture of Bulgaria would open up an entire Russian corridor from the Black Sea to the Adriatic through Serbia and Montenegro, along with Hungary. shaking Bulgaria will also sabotage the Three Seas initiative. Bulgaria is an extremely important country geopolitically - it borders the Western Balkans, controls Europe's busiest land border with Turkey, and in the east has a key role in the Black Sea and the conflict in Ukraine. Bulgaria is a huge supplier of weapons of Soviet models for Ukraine.
    The American historian, publicist and analyst Robert Kaplan calls the Bulgarians "the lonely man of the Balkans". Very few journalists and analysts understand this nation, and this can play a bad joke on European politics and NATO's defense capabilities. The Bulgarians are left as a periphery and for many Western diplomats this is an incomprehensible country and people. Russia will use this chance and everyone in the Balkans knows it. Bulgaria must be helped. A rupture in this part of the Balkans and Eastern Europe is a colossal threat to Europe.

    • @lineikatabs
      @lineikatabs Před 3 dny +5

      Nah, bro.

    • @KaloyanKasabov
      @KaloyanKasabov Před 3 dny +1

      Yeah, the majority of us who are pro eu are simply not expecting the EU to do much. Being in the western bloc is a positive in our eyes, but we are simply not cared about. Seen as a dying country with a dying people and the future... It ain't looking nice

    • @RealMoneyBoy
      @RealMoneyBoy Před 3 dny +11

      Bulgaria should be neutral like Switzerland

    • @4realm8rusirius
      @4realm8rusirius Před 3 dny +7

      ​@@RealMoneyBoyEarly Bulgarian Revolutionaries during the times of the Ottomans did want it to be the "Switzerland of the Balkans" funnily enough.

    • @almostai3379
      @almostai3379 Před 3 dny +20

      @@RealMoneyBoy Ask Belgium how well it did being "neutral" in WW2

  • @natedcarr6148
    @natedcarr6148 Před 3 dny +25

    Let's hope for peace, stability, and a just, stable government in Bulgaria.

  • @user-pz1ql1tl7v
    @user-pz1ql1tl7v Před 3 dny +11

    As a person from Bulgaria, I can 100% say that this is pretty accurate.

  • @janignacio7810
    @janignacio7810 Před 3 dny +19

    as a Bulgarian, this now feels like a comedy version of Game of Thrones.

    • @gargaraslaika
      @gargaraslaika Před dnem +1

      The big plot twist at the end of this election season will be Boiko is Peevskis's uncle. And the they fucked. In the next election season Peevski backstabs Boiko and sends him to jail

  • @AJCrowley0153
    @AJCrowley0153 Před 3 dny +28

    You're mispronouncing pretty much anything with an "e" in it. The letter never changes its sound in Bulgarian (and possibly other Slavic languages), it's always hard "e", like in Shrek or Belgium

  • @reyson01
    @reyson01 Před 3 dny +8

    Always remember that the easiest way to keep hold of power in a corrupt country, is using "anti-corruption" to get rid of your corrupt competition.

    • @eeeee6717
      @eeeee6717 Před 3 dny

      This is literally what PP-DB did...

    • @reyson01
      @reyson01 Před 3 dny +1

      @@eeeee6717 It's what Putin, Erdogan, Lukashenko, Orban and Vucic did.

  • @alexander1498
    @alexander1498 Před 3 dny +18

    Game of thrones in real life is in Bulgaria.

    • @teosandev6116
      @teosandev6116 Před 3 dny +1

      And both Cate and Sansa work hard here for free under Little Finger. Its the Bulgarian Miracle! 0^

    • @esinmusicofficial
      @esinmusicofficial Před 15 hodinami

      ahahahahahahha

    • @desanbg4461
      @desanbg4461 Před 10 hodinami

      Boyko Borisov is Varis and he has little birds everywhere 🐦

  • @MrMantoko
    @MrMantoko Před 3 dny +8

    Quick update from today. New elections are coming in this October on your local cinema ... Bulgaria - Prive that anarchy is possible

  • @FalconsEye58094
    @FalconsEye58094 Před 3 dny +30

    Is election/political burnout a thing?

  • @hamster3mpire
    @hamster3mpire Před 3 dny +16

    OMG BULGARIA MENTIONED 🦅🦅🦅🦅

  • @xXxLooPxXx
    @xXxLooPxXx Před 3 dny +10

    Very good summary of the situation in the last couple of years in Bulgaria.

    • @alexandernaydenov7539
      @alexandernaydenov7539 Před 5 hodinami

      Agree cause in 10 years might not exist anymore which im sad its my country but politicians are dictators in my country

  • @NibanoTugano
    @NibanoTugano Před 3 dny +20

    Not even Portugal is that unstable

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před 3 dny +4

      Compared to any post-Soviet state Portugal is a stable nation.

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem

      ​@@diogorodrigues747 Post-Soviet refers to countries that were part of the USSR, from what I know. Bulgaria wasn't. But even so, I think the Baltics are prob doing better than Portugal, especially Estonia.
      And if you're talking about post-Communist countries in general, I think Czech Republic & Slovenia have surpassed Portugal.
      In terms of just political stability, a lot of countries can be better than a rich one, even if they are poor. Romania has been very stable politically in these past tumultous years, for example. 🙂

    • @diogorodrigues747
      @diogorodrigues747 Před dnem

      @@dyawr Some countries are doing great (I think Estonia is an example for all of Europe, for example), but most of them are sh*tty countries infested with corruption, oligarchs and vatniks.

  • @beroecaaaa
    @beroecaaaa Před dnem +3

    As a Bulgarian, I prefer listening to this rather than to local interpretations.

  • @BerlinBoi67
    @BerlinBoi67 Před 3 dny +32

    Sounds like a job for Czar Simeon again

    • @Pyxlean
      @Pyxlean Před 3 dny +1

      Nope, he was corrupt as PM too

    • @joshuafrimpong244
      @joshuafrimpong244 Před 3 dny +9

      They should just restore the monarchy

    • @tedv8323
      @tedv8323 Před 3 dny +5

      This is a part of the problem, we expect some kind of KING to come and save us.

    • @todortodorov6056
      @todortodorov6056 Před 3 dny +1

      Why? What qualities does he have that others don't? The problem is not the PM, but the people.

    • @asentseto
      @asentseto Před 3 dny +1

      Yes! Bring back our tsar!💪🇧🇬

  • @evilmex1962
    @evilmex1962 Před 3 dny +77

    day without political instability in EU is day wasted

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Před 3 dny +47

      Some EU countries are pretty stable. Still, much better democratic instability than autocratic stability.

    • @Hardcore_Remixer
      @Hardcore_Remixer Před 3 dny +16

      ​@@soundscape26 Finally someone said it.

    • @BlacKi-nd4uy
      @BlacKi-nd4uy Před 3 dny

      @@soundscape26 the far right in germany always says the government is chaos, it ruins the country. man they keep shut their eyes to make sure they dont compare it to other countries around. the far right in germany wants this country to break like the other countries around. just check france, no need to look at even smaller countries.

    • @dinte215
      @dinte215 Před 3 dny +6

      ​@@soundscape26that moronic view is why democracy is declining. Its participants have that mentality that its some untouchable religion that people should accept regardless of its consequence.
      Please wish and try to achieve democratic stability, this democratic age has existed for

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 Před 3 dny +2

      Democracy by its very nature isn't really that stable because it allows public views from all sides, which is always tricky to get them all working well together, but it's the best system we have compared to the alternatives when it come to giving the people a voice, but with so many voice, stability was never going to be its strong point, but compared to the alternatives, it's a far better system.
      The only real flaws I see is that there needs to be more transparency on everything governments are doing with the voters, basically, there's too much of a disconnect from the voters and the ones in powers and it's creating a divide of mistrust, in other words, if governments actually listen to the people and actually did what they wanted, things would be a lot calmer in the west now, and this is a western thing with the far right in Europe, to what's going on in the US, the pattern is the same, lack of trust from voters in the system.

  • @tomgjgj
    @tomgjgj Před 3 dny +22

    Well fuck, at least they have elections.

    • @opushead
      @opushead Před 2 dny

      The results would be the same if we hadn't elections. It looks like we have the right to vote (officialy), but in the end of the day the mafia is manipulating the vote.

    • @tomgjgj
      @tomgjgj Před 2 dny

      @@opushead Well fuck.

    • @markdouglas8073
      @markdouglas8073 Před 2 dny

      Like Russia?

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem

      ​@@markdouglas8073 No, these are actually free elections.

    • @user-sj9hc7ej3e
      @user-sj9hc7ej3e Před 12 hodinami

      @@dyawr 60% of the votes were either corporate, bribed or government workers and their families and friends who always go and vote for the people who gave them their positions (aligned with the mob-parties until death basically). The elections will only be "free" when turnout is much much higher (only 32% of the eligible voters actually went to the polls) and that will never happen. It's both sick and self-sustaining, a modern form of feudalism.

  • @user-iz2tq3dx5d
    @user-iz2tq3dx5d Před 3 dny +18

    Israel: I can relate

  • @Khantia
    @Khantia Před 3 dny +25

    ITN isn't precisely Euro-skeptic. Or at least their leader isn't. Although they do seem to have started shifting more to the right as time passes.

    • @roxader4299
      @roxader4299 Před 3 dny +5

      It is becoming more and more so by the day. During the election campaign ITN said for example that they oppose giving more military aid to Ukraine. Oh, and they also joined ECR in the EU. ITN is turning into a new IMRO, a more moderate version of the far right parties Revival and Velichie.

    • @skillerbg
      @skillerbg Před 3 dny +2

      They were always right, but being patriotic doesn't necessarily mean Euro-Scetic or pro-Russian.

    • @Edge50199
      @Edge50199 Před 3 dny

      ITN are the reason why we need to have 10% instead of the current 4% vote barrier to enter in the parliament. Utterly useless party that have brought nothing to the table except cheap populism and dumb decisions that followed horrible consequences. When they were in coalition with PP they had 4 ministers: 1 exiled all sponsors from the sport venues, 1 speculated and raised the price of electricity to the point where many factories need it to temporarily close and got indebt, 1 shutdown all major infrastructure projects and proudly said that there won't be starting as long as he is minister and finally, 1 that was so incompetent as minister of foreign affairs that when the war in Ukraine started she didn't have any idea how to bring our citizen back to the country and few sailors were stuck in Mariupol on the battlefield.

  • @Brown95P
    @Brown95P Před 3 dny +5

    I never thought l'd hear such a thing as a "bulgarian mafia" in my lifetime, but here we are.
    My condolences to the bulgarian people for having to suffer through this political impasse.

    • @Uponn1
      @Uponn1 Před dnem +4

      oh the mafia issue if pretty big here, Bulgaria is one of the safest countries out there for the average day-to-day person, but if you decide to start a business here, then shit can get real with mafia

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem +2

      Mafia & criminality have been one of the main issues in Bulgaria post-Communism.

  • @teelo12000
    @teelo12000 Před 3 dny +22

    heh heh "pee pee party" huhuhu

    • @dalia_mar
      @dalia_mar Před 3 dny +2

      Teelo , "Prodaljzavame Promyanata" is too hard to pronounce by an English speaker. 😅 So, it's coming the "pee-pee" (пиш-пиш) party. They happened to be bigger crooks than everyone else before them, by the way.

    • @user-df1ns1ob8y
      @user-df1ns1ob8y Před dnem +3

      Peak humour

  • @dimitardimitrov8449
    @dimitardimitrov8449 Před 3 dny +9

    Bulgarian names are hard 😅❤

    • @dimitardimitrov8449
      @dimitardimitrov8449 Před 3 dny +1

      And so are bg politics 😂😢

    • @MakerInMotion
      @MakerInMotion Před 3 dny +2

      Bulgarian names sound cool. Icelandic names...now those are hard. It's like in Iceland they pick names by letting a cat walk across a keyboard.

  • @BalkanSlav
    @BalkanSlav Před 3 dny +5

    You were wrong about no one forming a government after the NOV 2021 elections. PP (We continue the change) managed to form a government trough an unheard of (at least in Bulgaria) 4 party coalition with BSP, ITN and DB. Though the government was toppled after 9 months by ITN leaving the coalition due to the lift of the VETO for accession of Macedonia into the EU. So with that and the rotational government of PP+DB with GERB and support from DPS (for constitutional amendments), PPDB were the only party/coalition that was able to form governments in the last years and both times they were toppled mainly by GERB, DPS, Revival (Vazrazhdane) and ITN.

  • @Baniejnok
    @Baniejnok Před 3 dny +4

    Could you do a video on Belgium’s federal and regional elections of June 9th and the upcoming municipal elections of October?

  • @tepesobrejac4360
    @tepesobrejac4360 Před 3 dny +35

    Hey! Could you make a video about Romanian politics some day? A lot has been happening these years, now after the last EU and local elections (which took place on the same day) accusations of voter fraud have been flying around as a record number of votes were annulled, in addition to many other scandals.

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem

      Omg, spare me. *Romania has been stable for the past few years.* And actually doing well. There haven't been any serious accusations of election fraud, just a loud candidate in a place or two, upset about losing.

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem

      Can you ppl *stop* putting our country down every chance you get & reinforcing this horrible negative stereotypes about it, that often have *nothing* to do with reality? This is nothing but an inferiority complex in Romanian society, that fuels other people's prejudice. 🙄

  • @metalhead6783
    @metalhead6783 Před 3 dny +2

    So, is there any other way then a credit card to buy the too long magazine? I'm interested but i don't have a credit card, they are very rare here.

  • @piccalillipit9211
    @piccalillipit9211 Před 3 dny +33

    *I LIVE IN BULGARIA* dont let the political situation fool you - things work VERY well here - I found a pot hole last week - reported it on the city app. 2 days later I got a message and a picture to show they had fixed it.
    Power is VERY devolved here - the national government only deal with truly national issues like defence and trade deals. My city is Burgas - look it up and tell me if it looks like a UK city

    • @darkoparko6685
      @darkoparko6685 Před 3 dny +21

      burgas is really an exception, I cant understand why but we call it the "most european bulgarian city"

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Před 3 dny +1

      @@darkoparko6685 - I have not travelled since before the pandemic - but I would not say its that different from Plovdiv, Valiko Tarnovo, Varna. Maybe it is and I have not noticed??

    • @ozymandiasultor9480
      @ozymandiasultor9480 Před 3 dny

      No, it doesn't look like a UK city.

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Před 3 dny

      @@ozymandiasultor9480 My rent is €150 on a beach front apartment.

    • @Hardcore_Remixer
      @Hardcore_Remixer Před 3 dny +6

      What do you mean? How could it look like a UK city when it looks better than London?

  • @myronidasvestarossa
    @myronidasvestarossa Před 2 dny +1

    I visited Bulgaria last month on an Eastern European and Türkiye trip and I saw a lot of billboards of politicians and a local explained their elections just keep rolling on and on.

  • @borismatev6181
    @borismatev6181 Před 2 dny +4

    This is a really good summary. Only two points I want to add:
    - The new "Greatness" party surprised everyone when they got in parliament, as nobody in the media has talked about them before, but it turns out they had promoted themselves hardcore in CZcams, TikTok, Telegram, etc. They are a very weird mix of a pro-Russian party, combined with a Ponzi scheme type business, some people call them a cult and possibly also have a small paramilitary squad as well. There are a bunch of pro-Russian influencers attached to them as well.
    - There is also talk that the current president will resign, create a party and come as a savior from the chaos. Which is a bit worrying, as he seems as possibly a bit authoritarian and pro-Russian, and is a very good political operator overall, has a bit of Orban vibes to him.

    • @Fubu2
      @Fubu2 Před 8 hodinami +1

      Velichie (Greatness) has already split in half so that was a big LUL in our political system.

    • @alexandernaydenov7539
      @alexandernaydenov7539 Před 4 hodinami

      We need someone to be like Orban what's wrong and worrying about that i can't understand people they don't want GERB-SDS DPS to be leaders but they are worried about Rumen Radev you can't even put up your own mind yikes. At least the leader will put his country and nation before NATO Europe Alliance and won't even agree with them Orban is a example how leader should act not like our politicians to ass lick for money

  • @ReekyCheeks
    @ReekyCheeks Před 3 dny +6

    Lack of stability is why most of our population left..

    • @alexandernaydenov7539
      @alexandernaydenov7539 Před 5 hodinami

      how people cannot leave we have production of 10% rest coming from the world our economy is in worst state ever

  • @buzzthedevourer5333
    @buzzthedevourer5333 Před 3 dny +8

    politics just about everywhere is crazy nowadays
    i pity the future history teacher preparing their unit on the 2020s

  • @fighterbg3695
    @fighterbg3695 Před 11 hodinami +1

    Thanks for explaining my own country's politics for me mate

  • @Kris_96
    @Kris_96 Před 3 dny +2

    FINALLY A BULGARIAN VIDEO!!!

  • @user-js7pe2gs9o
    @user-js7pe2gs9o Před 22 hodinami +1

    Great video and such a pleasure to see the chaos in Bulgarian politics explained in English and without the local bieses. Of course there are other small but crucal details, but the most important thing is that "the deep goverment" doesn't want to loose control and the majority of the population have lost hope long time ago. Such videos can be very helpful.
    Thanks a lot 🙂

  • @user-xt1bz2rs4v
    @user-xt1bz2rs4v Před 3 dny +12

    This thing gives me deep PTSD as an Israeli

    • @seanchernov7178
      @seanchernov7178 Před 3 dny

      This will get as bad as in Israel if they will cook (never let them cook again) Revival, Grab, DPS coalition. Being insanely corrupt, incompetent and the far right calling the shots...
      People really should learn that sometimes punishing liberal parties isn't the way

    • @goldenfiberwheat238
      @goldenfiberwheat238 Před 3 dny

      Bulgaria doesn’t have any neighbors that want to invade them though

    • @user-xt1bz2rs4v
      @user-xt1bz2rs4v Před 3 dny

      @@goldenfiberwheat238 A dysfunctional political system and the rise of less than legitimate political actors as a result of that system's dysfunction sure do seem similar though.
      Alternatively, we are surrounded by enemies, what's their excuse?!

    • @Pyxlean
      @Pyxlean Před 3 dny

      @@user-xt1bz2rs4v Our excuse is Communism

    • @user-xt1bz2rs4v
      @user-xt1bz2rs4v Před 3 dny

      @@Pyxlean Fair. While I have the honor to talk to an actual Bulgarian, what's the whole deal with the time you elected your former king to be PM in the 90's?

  • @kuzeyboy
    @kuzeyboy Před 3 dny +71

    I think your view of corruption in Bulgaria is somewhat false. Corruption is endemic in every aspect of Bulgarian life and this is just reflected in politics. After living in Bulgaria for 7 years, I would say that the basic message is, "I want everything but pay nothing and especially if I can find a way not to pay." Bulgarians completely know the situation but don't really want things to change if it affects their pockets.

    • @inbb510
      @inbb510 Před 3 dny +7

      That's like the working class in the UK then.

    • @ginismoja2459
      @ginismoja2459 Před 3 dny +3

      Very true...

    • @i.m.3940
      @i.m.3940 Před 3 dny +9

      Factually incorrect statement. Did you personally ask every single Bulgarian before making such a bold claim? There are plenty of people that want things to change and you're simply spitting in their faces by refusing to acknowledge they exist.

    • @cheezus4772
      @cheezus4772 Před 3 dny +9

      To be fair to my fellow Bulgarians they did want things to change, which is why they put a whole bunch of reformist parties in parliament. Its the failure of those reformists to make any sort of functional government that has us in this dead end

    • @naydennaydev7071
      @naydennaydev7071 Před 3 dny +2

      @@i.m.3940wym? Of course there are people who want change, but most of the people are ok with bribing cops while complaining how corrupt everything is. Corruption is a deal you are not part of as they say...

  • @martinpetkov7859
    @martinpetkov7859 Před 3 dny +10

    Bulgarian here; the simple truth is that Borisov is a genius at the game called Bulgarian politics. He always comes as a winner despite the situation he is in. The anti-corruption coalition are fine but you can’t win a game playing by the rules while your opponent doesn’t play by that rules.

    • @stivan81
      @stivan81 Před 2 dny +2

      If politics is about winning for the benefit of yourself and your cronies rather than your society and country, I guess I can't disagree.

    • @dyawr
      @dyawr Před dnem

      True..

  • @hughjass1044
    @hughjass1044 Před 3 dny +3

    What a mess!

  • @ststankov77
    @ststankov77 Před 12 hodinami

    Some details are missing, but in general, it is a very good review

  • @gabrielramirez8346
    @gabrielramirez8346 Před 3 dny +1

    Most stable political era in Bulgaria

  • @stivan81
    @stivan81 Před 2 dny +1

    A very major point that I think should have been emphatically mentioned was that when the time for the rotation came in spring '24, GERB (the party of B.Borisov which was meant to start presiding over the government) left negotiations without reaching an agreement and presented a new government lineup that hadn't even got the consent of most ministers. It was shockingly unprincipled, dishonest and politically disruptive and has completely annihilated any trust between the two major blocks that are at least statedly pro-EU and supportive of Ukraine.

  • @fine93
    @fine93 Před 13 hodinami

    craziest monet heist in history

  • @someinteresting
    @someinteresting Před 3 dny

    Suffered through is very accurate, it is tremendously tedious every other month elections...

  • @ares106
    @ares106 Před 2 dny

    Fascinating.

  • @BEkov-kd8cf
    @BEkov-kd8cf Před 3 dny +9

    Living in Bulgaria has become beyond depressing. Every aspect of this country is beyond corrupt. I work as a doctor and sadly even healthcare is beyond repair and in need of an ground up reform. It's gotten to the point where It might just be better for most people to jump ship to west europe.

    • @daikucoffee5316
      @daikucoffee5316 Před 3 dny +2

      It’s not even less corrupt in Western Europe, we just have more money because of a larger public sector.

    • @ivanpetrov5258
      @ivanpetrov5258 Před dnem +1

      Градинката на съседа винаги изглежда по-хубава

  • @Satou-Akira71
    @Satou-Akira71 Před 3 dny +4

    a face made for prison, almost as bad as von der Leyen's ordering of billions of big pharma juice via her private mobile phone

  • @martin0499
    @martin0499 Před 11 hodinami +1

    It's obvious this system isn't working and it needs to change. So far the two ideas floating around are to change to a presidential republic, which I don't think is a good idea, and majority bonus system, which is used in Greece. It would undermine the people's choice, but for stability, the second one works better.

  • @nic4obg
    @nic4obg Před 3 dny +2

    I'm Bulgarian and your reporting is really good to represent the sh show we're experiencing for the 3rd year in a roll, but is widely skewed. Here are a few inaccuracies:
    - I don't know why you keep calling "The Opposition" an opposition - the windows of governance we've had during the last 3 years, they were in power for 2 out of those 3 years, the rest was a caretaker parliament.
    - The rotating cabinet that was proposed was a dumpster fire from the beginning. In essence it was entirely out of "the opposition" ministers, with just the foreign minister from GERB, who was a European commissioner up until now, very well respected by Ursula FDL. When it was time for her to form her rotating cabinet, it wasn't "the bad fat man" that plotted to ruin it, it was "the opposition" that didn't hold up the end of their deal. There was a leaked audio at the beginning of this sham, where the leadership of PP did flat out say "don't mind that, they will never get to their rotation, we just need to get our guys in the important institutions".
    - GERB is actually part of the EPP and has been uncompromising with the mission and directions from the EPP. Do I prefer we have a better man than Borisov leading the country -- absolutely. For financial and geopolitical direction at least that is reliable
    - PP/DB voters ("The opposition") had a falling out because of their sheer incompetence and disregard of how to play by the rules. It's a bunch of "fake it till you make it" excel finance bros that are really not fit for ruling. Half the friends I have that voted for them have given up on them for that exact reason. Apparently they can't be politicians, because the legacy parties know how to do wrong things legally, those loosers consistently do "the right" things illegally. How "right" their decisions are is highly debatable, but it consistently backfires. They came in to power for the first time right after the pandemic, and instead of recovery, they nominally doubled the national debt and the finance minister keeps showing % of GDP to debt graphs to cover it up, as if we don't have the internet to look it up.
    - DPS is a mafia involved in political blackmail and nobody will rely on them for anything. Every government so far from GERB we had in the last 13 years, they were kept in functional isolation. As mafia, they are obviously ingrown in to government structures for decades, but slowly their power was diminishing. Now after the "rise of the opposition" they somehow have rebound.
    - The elections right now, everybody just refuses to talk. Meaning - not attending coalition government talks. Nobody but GERB want to rule and everybody proclaims they will be an opposition. And literally post-election day.
    - The future? - well it's bleak... the president is more of a Russian sympathizer than Vucic in Serbia or Orban in Hungary, elected and endorsed by the same "Opposition". While PP/DB is flying in the clouds trying to find links between Borisov and the mafia boss and engaging solely in smear campaigns as if that will get them votes, the mafia party (DPS) is benefiting greatly from the loss of trust in institutions and low voter turnout. The far-right clowns are consolidating and they are as literal as you can get, repeating Kremlin state TV propaganda points. We have the old Socialist party guard, that are still in parliament and the rumors are the current pro--Kremlin president will make his own party and we will have a strong majority Kremlin megaphone government that is more pro-Russian than Belarus. In NATO... in the EU...

  • @dudewithfairhair
    @dudewithfairhair Před 20 hodinami

    As a bulgarian I am ok with having no government, since that means that businesses aren't being rackateered and are able to grow. That is probably one of the reasons we are doing economically well, as well as the fact that PPDB raised the welfare of pensioners and the pay of teachers (the last being started in 2018).

  • @AltsekBUL
    @AltsekBUL Před dnem

    Best vid about Bulgaria.

  • @theconqueringram5295
    @theconqueringram5295 Před 3 dny

    You say crazy, I say fascinating.

  • @natheriver8910
    @natheriver8910 Před 3 dny

    Very interesting

  • @wildyracing1
    @wildyracing1 Před 11 hodinami +1

    Todor Zhivkov actually ruled Bulgaria between 1956 to 1989, but you can say he executed total power after 1962. Still, if you take the 1956 as his start, Zhivkov is the third longest ruling Bulgarian after Tsar Peter I (927-969) and Tsar Ioan Alexander (1331-1371). And his rule was actually not bad to the people, if you accept the realities of the Eastern Block and socialist satellite alignment that our country had towards the USSR. Most repressions of the regime were done prior to Zhivkov coming to power, and this is a fact worth to be noted.

  • @user-ik8ot1gq3j
    @user-ik8ot1gq3j Před 3 dny +7

    Bulgaria is absolutely stable. We just don't have a regular government which is not a big deal.

  • @whatever8411
    @whatever8411 Před 10 hodinami +1

    We miss Todor Jivkov!

  • @isaaccasper9326
    @isaaccasper9326 Před 3 dny +1

    Can you cover the Mauritanian and Mongolian elections?

  • @Tini_Scrapitti
    @Tini_Scrapitti Před 3 dny +6

    Yes to anti-corruption, fight Putler style government. And yes to breeding its own people, or immigrants will be needed.

  • @dyawr
    @dyawr Před dnem

    I hope things stabilize soon. All this turmoil is hindering Bulgaria's development...

  • @presto6913
    @presto6913 Před 15 hodinami

    Thanks to you people I finally know what's up with the country I'm living my entire life

  • @SasuKrow
    @SasuKrow Před 3 dny +1

    At this point change is not going to come from within Bulgaria, we'll be getting pretty much the same results over and over again. Only thing that could move things forward is pressure from outside, be it EU or Russian pressure.

  • @sungoner5906
    @sungoner5906 Před 5 hodinami

    "The bulgarian parliament is my favourite tv comedy show" -forgot who said that but its true 💀

  • @ChangesOfTomorrow
    @ChangesOfTomorrow Před 3 dny

    Do we at least get an award or mention in Guinness book for the amount of elections we’ve had?

  • @ZytrixYoutube
    @ZytrixYoutube Před 2 dny

    As A Bulgarian Serb, Not That Much Happens In Person Only In Paper Nothing In This Video Has Really Effected Any Of Me Or My Friends At All

  • @Kris_96
    @Kris_96 Před 3 dny

    Correction - It's Slavi Trifonov, not Trofinov.

  • @martinlisitsata
    @martinlisitsata Před 3 dny

    i need to buy tickets to that , that there must be the bloodiest fight for power of the decade

  • @Yasen6275
    @Yasen6275 Před 3 dny

    4:02 "On paper two sides agreed... " There were no paper.

  • @cbakotako2791
    @cbakotako2791 Před 10 hodinami

    Perfect video, very good job!!!!!
    If you take two things out of this video - the biggest parties in Bulgaria and their leaders
    "Borisov, that was afraid of prosecution" 5:08
    "Delian Peevski, the mafia kingpin" 5:30
    Enough said... Btw GERB's goverment just failed couple of days ago and we will probably have another election soon :D

  • @alexrellion1458
    @alexrellion1458 Před 21 hodinou +1

    A thing not mentioned in the video but I think is very important - the EU are shooting themselves in the foot and are fully responsible for the rise in EU scepticism. Firstly not only the failure to address corruption in Bulgaria but Ursula von der Leyen endorsed Borisov and GERB in the last election in June which annoyed a lot of pro-EU Bulgarians and also gave more ammunition to anti-EU parties, just so she can secure a few more votes in the EU parliament.

  • @Medytacjusz
    @Medytacjusz Před 3 dny +15

    Man this was actually depressing to watch, even though I'm not From Bulgaria and I've been rather ignorant of Bulgarian politics until now.
    I mean just having a known mafia oligarch guy be a prominent figure in politics... and having one of the most powerful politicians be verifiably corrupt and persecutable (though the latter isn't unique even amongst more powerful nations cough Trump cough)

    • @alexbeck8564
      @alexbeck8564 Před 3 dny

      Yeah our politicians are all thieves and mafia. Everyone

    • @nebojsag.5871
      @nebojsag.5871 Před 3 dny +3

      Eastern Europeans:
      "First time?"

    • @user-sp6wm5cb1d
      @user-sp6wm5cb1d Před 3 dny

      As dumb qs it might sound in reality Boiko is one of the least corrupt politicians we have. When the Reformists came to power corruption increased and the standard of livong dropped A LOT.

    • @Edge50199
      @Edge50199 Před 3 dny

      Trumps, Bidens, Clintons, Bushes, Pellosies. There are so many clans in the US politics that are no different than mafia families. The difference is that US is rich and Bulgarians are poor so that's why americans don't care.

  • @k0pera
    @k0pera Před 20 hodinami +1

    There is a British saying "there are no eternal friends rather than eternal interests" i am Bulgarian and I am using this saying to say to your viewers (mainly Brithish liberal young people) that the interests of Bulgaria don't follow the interests of British or biggest EU members our future is bright with more common relationship with Russia, Arab countries and Iran rather Britain.

  • @tommasoastaldi2513
    @tommasoastaldi2513 Před 3 dny +2

    And I thought Italy had unstable politics

  • @Kret-o
    @Kret-o Před 3 dny +1

    Bulgaria moment

  • @Yasen6275
    @Yasen6275 Před 3 dny +1

    6:00 ДПС used to be turkish and roma party. For almost a dekade it is much more than that

  • @julianivanov3058
    @julianivanov3058 Před 3 dny +3

    You never want to see your country in the news...

  • @iordanvassilev8091
    @iordanvassilev8091 Před 3 dny +1

    Today GERB failed to make a government and DPS(MRF) is facing internal fights because of Peevski.
    Also, this is without even mentioning the changes to our constitution which make it more difficult to overthrow parties which have taken power (these changes are partly responsible for the loss in confidence in the reformists, because they participated in writing them alongside Borisov and Peevski), a problem which has persisted in our history since 1879 (literally since our liberation). Another change made our courts even more convoluted.

  • @BG6924TX
    @BG6924TX Před 2 dny +1

    How about EPPs Ursula von der Leyen and Manfred Webber personally supporting Boyko Borissov and his party GERB and being blind about how corrupted he/they are. And than we are wondering why euroscepticism grows…

  • @Elindress
    @Elindress Před 13 hodinami

    Why? It's the 7th? Thought it was 19th. You sure?

  • @d_1m0w
    @d_1m0w Před 13 hodinami

    Guys this is far not the worst situation Bulgaria has been in considering elections, in the 1930s Bulgaria had around 30 (not sure if it was 23 or more ) failed attempts to form a government. It is not going to get any better anytime soon until people start to see themselves presented by a party, just a single one that hasn’t had its hands befouled til now…

  • @hxejacjiuyetheunpronouncea80

    Some information in the video is not true. The first time PP won the elections it did form a government which existed for about 9 months.

  • @GabrurTrufonov
    @GabrurTrufonov Před dnem +1

    You want to know the worse part. In Bulgaria's system individual people (and pretty sure corporations too) can't donate to their favorite candidate (at least publicly behind closed doors you have oligarchs probably donating millions to everyone be they Gerb,PP or however else) however in reality these elections are payed for by taxpayer dollars
    That's right all these elections all the campaigns of all the party are payed for by our hard earned money you know instead of that money going to literally anything else our country is lacking in like
    -infrastructure
    -state pensions
    -education
    -not having a deficit
    -programes aimed at fighting corruption
    I could keep going...but instead we have to hold an election that ultimately won't change anything because all the parties positions are the same

    • @GabrurTrufonov
      @GabrurTrufonov Před dnem

      Honestly as sad as it is l'm not surprised that complaining about politics and refusing to participate in politics is now basically a part of our culture

  • @stevejohnson3357
    @stevejohnson3357 Před 3 dny

    If we look at Belgium, The Netherlands (sometimes) the US and others we see an inability to form a political consensus because people are viewing the world in very different ways. I don't know how to fix that.

  • @umbracatervae8914
    @umbracatervae8914 Před 10 hodinami +1

    Additionally, Peevski removed Geshev once Geshev started turning on Borisov and Peevski on the back of a staged bombing accident against the prosecutor. Then once Geshev was ousted, his deputy is currently acting General Prosecutor, but he was installed by Peevski so he will be solidified, once the right time comes. Currently, Borisov has sniper security around his house 24/7 and Peevski moves like a presidential motorcade. It's getting interesting.

  • @mrgopnik5964
    @mrgopnik5964 Před dnem

    Or as we say in Bulgaria: “Nothing new under the sun”

  • @eriktonev3797
    @eriktonev3797 Před 12 hodinami

    Its effed bois