Bulgaria's election winner Rumen Radev receives mandate to form government


Rumen Radev, former Bulgarian president and leader of Progressive Bulgaria coalition, votes during the parliamentary election, in Sofia, Bulgaria. REUTERS/Stoyan Nenov

SOFIA, May 7 (Reuters) - ⁠Bulgaria's President Iliana Iotova offered election winner Rumen ⁠Radev the mandate to form a new government ‌as prime minister on Thursday after his Progressive Bulgaria comfortably won a parliamentary election last month, the eighth in five years.

The eurosceptic ​former fighter pilot's party won 44.6% ⁠of the vote ⁠in the parliamentary election on April 19, giving it a ⁠majority ‌of seats in the 240-seat legislature.

After receiving the mandate, Radev outlined his future cabinet, which ⁠is expected to be approved by the ​parliament on ‌Friday.

Radev stepped down from Bulgaria's largely ceremonial presidency in ⁠January to ​run in the April parliamentary election after mass protests over corruption and rising living costs forced out the ⁠previous government in December.

PB's victory, the ​single biggest vote haul in a generation, will enable Radev to head Bulgaria's first single-party government in nearly three ⁠decades, a boost to political stability after repeated elections.

Velislava Petrova-Chamova and Galab Donev will take over as foreign and finance ministers in the new cabinet, which will ​have to swiftly pass a new ⁠budget, set a debt ceiling to ensure payments for ​pensions and salaries and recover ‌missed EU funds.

(Reporting by Alex Alex ​Lefkowitz, writing by Angeliki Koutantou and Daria Sito-Sucic; Editing by Alex Richardson and Peter Graff)

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