As of today the election campaign is officially on in Bulgaria. It will last 29 days and will officially end at 24.00 hours on 2 April, 2021, by a decision of the Central Electoral Commission. 24 hours before the holding of the parliamentary elections on 4 April electioneering is prohibited, so that 3 April will be election silence day.
During the election campaigning for the 45th National Assembly, citizens, parties, coalitions, initiative committees, candidates and observers are free to electioneer verbally or in written form. This can take place at election rallies, as well as through media service providers; social media and personal blogs are not considered as such. However, an important requirement is that election campaigning can only take place in the Bulgarian language.
In the conditions of the coronavirus pandemic, the health minister has advised politicians to keep voters safe by electioneering remotely, to hold rallies outdoors at which distancing shall be observed and PPE used. Responsibility for the way election events are organized rests with their organizers and the Interior Ministry authorities.
Over the next 30 days there is a prohibition on publishing anonymous electioneering material or such which runs contrary to the accepted principles of morality, the dignity or good name of the candidates. Political campaigning is also prohibited on public transport, at public institutions or enterprises.
Public service media – the Bulgarian National TV and the Bulgarian National Radio – are obligated to provide objective and fair coverage of the initiatives of the candidates registered by the parties, coalitions and initiative committees, with due regard for their equal treatment and their importance. The election campaign is covered by public service media in various forms, but compulsorily during time slots specifically designated for that purpose and indicated as such.
No later than 7 days after election day, the parties, coalitions and initiative committees must remove the electioneering material they have put up for the past election.
All Bulgarian citizens aged over 18 as of the date of the elections shall be the object of electioneering, with the exception of persons who have been deprived of their legal capacity and persons serving a prison sentence. Preliminary Central Electoral Commission data show that there are 6,732,316 people on the electoral registers in the country. Under the Election Code, voting is mandatory for Bulgarian citizens though no penalty is envisaged for non-voters.
Compiled by Elena Karkalanova
English version: Milena Daynova
North Macedonia’s Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski stated that the Macedonian issue is not closed, because the European Court of Human Rights has ruled that the rights of people with a Macedonian identity in Bulgaria are not being respected...
Bulgaria has emerged from a long political slumber – 81 days after the sixth early parliamentary elections, the National Assembly elected the country's 105th government. A total of 125 MPs supported the coalition cabinet, formed through an agreement..
The new plenary session of the 51 st National Assembly began with declarations about the priorities of the political parties. For GERB-SDS, the main task is the formation of a regular government and a stable ruling majority, MP Toma Bikov said. He..
"The 'Zhelyazkov' cabinet must continue to work, even as a minority government." This was GERB leader Boyko Borissov's comment on the Constitutional..
+359 2 9336 661