Snap election likely in Bulgaria after reformist group rejects bid for government


  • World
  • Wednesday, 14 Jan 2026

Rumen Radev, President of Bulgaria, speaks during the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Summit at United Nations headquarters in New York City, New York, U.S., September 18, 2023. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs

SOFIA, Jan 14 (Reuters) - Bulgaria's ‌second-largest parliamentary grouping, the reformist PP-DB, declined a ‌request on Wednesday from the president to try ‌to form a new government, increasing the likelihood of a snap election in the European Union's poorest member state.

Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov's ‍coalition government, backed by GERB-SDS, resigned ‍last month after weeks ‌of street protests against state corruption and a new budget ‍that ​would have increased some taxes.

In line with the constitution, Bulgarian President Rumen Radev on Monday had ⁠formally asked the conservative GERB-SDS to form ‌the government which they rejected. On Wednesday PP-DB, which seeks closer ⁠relations with ‍the European Union, also rejected the mandate, BTA agency reported.

Radev is now expected to offer a chance to govern to ‍another party and then if they ‌refuse he will have to call a snap vote, Bulgaria's eighth in just four years.

Despite such uncertainty, Bulgaria joined the euro zone on January 1 as scheduled. But it needs political stability to speed the uptake of EU funds into its creaking infrastructure, encourage foreign investment and ‌root out endemic state corruption.

The GERB-SDS coalition won the last election in October 2024 but only took power in January 2025 ​after months of talks and needed the support of other parties in the divided legislature.

(Reporting by Ivana Sekularac; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Russia says talk of a ceasefire, rather than a full peace deal, in Ukraine is simply not serious
EU to split Ukraine financial support with 30 billion euros for budget, 60 billion for military
Ukraine's new defence minister vows army reform and innovation
Some personnel advised to leave U.S. military base in Qatar, diplomats say
Trump son-in-law Kushner, envoy Witkoff plan to meet Putin in Moscow, Bloomberg reports
Greek airspace blackout linked to old systems, not cyberattack, report says
Syria asks Lebanon to hand over Assad-era officers after Reuters report
Benin offers citizenship to African diaspora, with help from Spike Lee
Tunisian journalist Chatha Belhaj Mubarak freed after sentence cut
George Vassiliou, 'eternal optimist' president who led Cyprus into the EU, dies at 94

Others Also Read