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The politics of Bulgaria was aimed at joining the European Union and the NATO fold, as the alliances were recognised to have political agendas similar to the goals of the new Bulgarian democracy. In contemporary Bulgaria, the government and its leader - the Prime Minister, have more political influence and significance than the President.
The Democratic Party was formed by a breakaway from the Liberal Party led by Petko Karavelov in 1896. [1] [2] In the 1899 elections the party won 10 seats.It went on to win 27 in 1901, with Karavelov briefly serving as Prime Minister after the elections in a coalition government with the People's Liberal Party (PLP). [3]
Bulgarian New Democracy (Bulgarian: Българска Нова Демокрация, БНД) is a political faction in the Bulgarian National Assembly formed on 2007-12-05 by fourteen dissenters of the National Movement for Stability and Progress who claim that their former party has lost its liberal roots.
The party contested the 1997 Bulgarian parliamentary election as the Civil Union for the Republic – Bulgarian Euro-Left, winning 5.5% of the vote and 14 seats in the National Assembly. [5] [9] Two deputies from the Bulgarian Business Bloc joined the BEL in February 1998. [5] The party was part of the opposition in the National Assembly.
Democratic Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Демократична България - Обединение, ДБ, Demokratichna Balgariya, DB) is a political alliance in Bulgaria. Founded on 12 April 2018 as an electoral alliance between three political parties – DaB , DSB and the Green Movement , [ 8 ] it merged into PP-DB in 2023. [ 9 ]
Bulgarian Democratic Center (Bulgarian: Български Демократичен Център – an acronym for "Bulgarian Democratic Center"), formerly (Lider – Liberal Initiative for Democratic European Development) [6] is a Bulgarian political party registered in 2007.
He is considered the father of democracy or the head of the democratic changes. Philip Dimitrov was one of the first democratic leaders in the early 90s, serving from 1991 to 1992. Like the other post-socialist regimes in eastern Europe, Bulgaria found the transition to capitalism rather painful and not easy as expected.
Bulgaria is a parliamentary democracy where the prime minister is the head of government and the most powerful executive position. [111] The political system has three branches—legislative, executive and judicial, with universal suffrage for citizens at least 18 years old.