Bulgaria's ex-president leads Russia-friendly party to victory in snap parliamentary elections, exit polls show
Source: Kyiv Independent
Progressive Bulgaria, the Kremlin-friendly coalition led by former Bulgarian President Rumen Radev, is the projected winner of the country's snap parliamentary elections on April 19, according to multiple exit polls.
The coalition is on track to win 37-38% of the vote, exit polls show. While the final results are yet to be tallied, Radev claimed an "uncontested victory" in comments to reporters after the polls closed.
Radev has frequently criticized aid to Ukraine and Western sanctions against Russia while also opposing Ukraine's ascension to NATO and the European Union. His electoral win marks a victory for pro-Russian representation in the EU a week after Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban lost his country's parliamentary vote in a resounding defeat.
Radev resigned from the presidency in January to lead his Progressive Bulgaria coalition in a bid for parliament, promising to crack down on corruption. His center-left coalition is made up of former socialist politicians and Radev loyalists.
Read more: https://kyivindependent.com/bulgarias-ex-president-leads-russia-friendly-party-to-landslide-victory-in-snap-parliamentary-elections/
Here we go again, another baby Pootin. Pootin must have had an Orban loss in mind when grooming this guy.
NBachers
(19,501 posts)blue-wave
(5,368 posts)maxsolomon
(38,919 posts)Way to go, Bulgars. I'm sick of your Bulgur Wheat. Boycott!
Igel
(37,568 posts)And bulgur wheat isn't just Turkish, but more widespread.
Bulgarians have no great love for the Ottomans or Turks, their long-standing oppression.
Russian exerted a bit of an influence on standard Bulgarian, in fact, because when Bulgarian as a language was the scut language used by the serfs and losers Russia smuggled in Orthodox materials and such. Because Russians had no great love for the Ottomans, either.
Sadly, the link is in Bulgarian; the English 'version' of the text is crap and I haven't looked at the Russian page but Google translate probably will cover most of the text that would matter.
Note that South Slavic, including Bulgarian, exerted some influence on standard Russian for centuries.