Sofia: Bulgaria will hold a presidential election on November 14, Parliament members decided on Thursday, when a politically broken country also prepared parliamentary elections that might occur in the same month.
Bulgaria holds a vote for the presidency, the ceremonial position is mostly, every five years.
Incumbent Rumen Radev, who has maintained a high approval rating because he was elected in 2016, running for the second five years.
He was supported by socialists and the ITN party anti-establishment, and was a critic of the spirit of the former Premier Boyko Borissov, a figure of the establishment of the rights that lead the Balkan country for most of the last decade until April.
The unconvincing parliamentary election that the month led to the appointment of the temporary government by Radev, which in 2020 supported a large anti-graft protest against the Borissov government.
The national snap snap in July once again produced the Hung and Bulgaria parliament now seems to be holding a third national election in November.
Prolonged political uncertainty inhibits the ability of Bulgaria to handle efficiently with the fourth wave of Covid-19 pandemic and utilizing the large European Union Coronavirus recovery fund.
The former Air Force Commander, Radev, 58, has become one of the most popular Bulgarian politicians in the midst of dissatisfaction that extends to corruption in the poorest country in the EU.
Other political parties, including Gerb Borissov, who accused Radev divided the nation, had not announced their candidates for the President.