Mass protests in Bulgaria against austerity measures and Home energy monitor costs forced out the government in February. Elections set for Sunday could lead to more political turmoil.
Recent
public-opinion surveys indicate that the conservative party that led
the previous administration and its main, left-leaning challenger are
running neck-and-neck, complicating prospects for the formation of a
governing coalition.
Unhappiness with low living standards and
perceived corruption in the European Union's poorest member state boiled
over this past winter, leading to nationwide demonstrations, initially
over rising electricity prices.
In a sign of the desperate public
mood, at least seven people have set themselves on fire—some explicitly
saying they were acting to protest government policies and corruption.
Six have died.
"The coming elections are like a joke to me, as is
any hope that things will get better," said Yoana Georgieva, a woman in
her early 20s living in Sofia. "I feel as if all of the parties and
their leaders are irrelevant to me and the life I live."
The
former conservative prime minister, Boyko Borisov, submitted his
resignation Feb. 20 after marchers in Sofia clashed with riot police, Home energy management saying he wanted to prevent violence from worsening.
Reacting
to the outcry over power prices, Bulgaria's energy regulator cut them
six weeks ago and the caretaker government has said they would remain
capped for a year.
Mr. Borisov, a former bodyguard to Soviet-era
dictator Todor Zhivkov, kept a tight rein on spending and navigated the
global financial crisis without needing an international bailout.
During
the campaign, Mr. Borisov has pledged to continue his drive for
austerity in public finances, which he says is based on the German
model. He has argued that taking painful steps now will make Bulgaria
more competitive in the long run and help it to avoid the fate of
Southern Europe.
But his support has been weakened by corruption allegations and a wiretapping scandal.
The
rival Socialist party has said that it would work to reduce the tax
burden on the poorest people in the country, where the average monthly
income is roughly 400 ($520) a month. The party has also promised to
raise wages and to improve tax collection to pay for it.
Plamen Oresharski, Power monitor
the Socialist candidate for prime minister, has also promised to reduce
unemployment by ending policies of the previous government that he said
squash aspiring businesses.
But both parties appear far from winning a majority in Parliament.
A
poll released Thursday by the Sova Harris agency put both Mr. Borisov's
centre-right party, the Citizens for the European Development of
Bulgaria, or GERB, at 20.9% and the Socialists at 20.4%, Another poll
done by Center of Analysis and Marketing put GERB at 21.3% and the
Socialists at 18.9%.
"It will be very difficult to form a
coalition," predicted Antoaneta Tzoneva, chairwoman of the Institute for
Public Environment Development, which advocates for fair elections and
judicial reform.
An analyst at IHS Global Insight, James Goundry,
said that if neither Mr. Borisov's party nor the Socialists emerge as
clear victors, a coalition focused only on specific issues could rule
until another round of elections, potentially in September.
Ms.
Tzoneva said she expected voter turnout to be low because people are
losing hope that the country's prospects will improve and see little
hope for change in any parties.
Amid concerns about the potential
for election fraud, opposition parties have hired an Austrian company
to count election results in parallel with official state agencies, an
unprecedented move in post-Communist Bulgaria.
Some international
observers led by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe are also coming to monitor the election.
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