Bulgaria's caretaker government takes over, pledges to secure conditions for fair elections


Newly appointed caretaker Prime Minister Andrey Gyurov attends an official ceremony with Bulgaria's President Iliana Iotova in Sofia, Bulgaria, February 12, 2026. REUTERS/Spasiyana Sergieva

SOFIA, Feb 19 (Reuters) - ⁠Bulgaria's caretaker government led by Andrey Gyurov, ⁠deputy governor of the Bulgarian National Bank, took ‌over duty on Thursday and pledged to secure conditions for fair elections on April 19.

The previous government resigned on ​December 11 following weeks of street ⁠protests over its ⁠perceived failure to tackle corruption and tax rises to ⁠support ‌higher state spending.

Stoil Tsitselkov, a member of the Public Council of the Central ⁠Election Commission, was named minister for fair ​elections, the first ‌ever such position in Bulgaria's government.

After consultations ⁠with political ​parties, President Iliana Iotova named Gyurov as caretaker prime minister and set April 19 as the date ⁠for a parliamentary election, the eighth ​in five years.

"We will accept the challenge to govern the country until the election of a regular ⁠cabinet," Gyurov told MPs.

"Aside from fair elections, we will work on key governmental issues. We will prepare the new extended budget and the base ​of the 2026 budget," he ⁠said.

Bulgaria, which joined the euro zone on January 1, ​has faced prolonged political instability, ‌with parties unable to form ​stable ruling coalitions in a fragmented parliament.

(Reporting by Alex Lefkowitz; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

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