Headlines

Bulgaria's caretaker PM says elections will be cleanest in years

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 1, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 2, 2026

Add as preferred source on Google
Bulgaria's caretaker PM says elections will be cleanest in years
Global Banking & Finance Awards 2026 — Call for Entries

KYIV, April 1 (Reuters) - Bulgaria's caretaker prime minister said elections this month will be among the country's cleanest in years after his government launched efforts to tackle widespread

Bulgaria's Caretaker PM Pledges Cleanest Elections in Years Amid Reforms

Efforts to Ensure Fair Elections and Tackle Corruption

Government Actions to Combat Misinformation and Corruption

KYIV, April 1 (Reuters) - Bulgaria's caretaker prime minister said elections this month will be among the country's cleanest in years after his government launched efforts to tackle widespread misinformation and corruption.

Andrey Gyurov, who took office in February after the resignation of the previous administration following street protests last year, expressed hope that free and fair elections on April 19 would mark a turning point for voters' confidence in institutions. 

Crackdown on Vote Buying

Dozens of people have been arrested in recent weeks linked to alleged vote buying as Gyurov seeks to clean up a perennial election problem in Bulgaria, one of Europe's most corrupt countries. The government has said that suspects have been found with cash and lists of names.

Public Confidence and Voter Turnout

"We think that this will be one of the fairest elections that we have seen in recent years," Gyurov said during a visit to Kyiv this week, adding that incidents of corruption being reported to police had soared during his tenure as people saw that authorities were taking action. 

In recent elections, Bulgaria has suffered from low turnout as disillusioned voters stayed away but Gyurov said there were signs that many more people would come to the polls this time around.

"I think this will have a multiplier effect on the confidence that people have in the institutions of the country."

Political Instability and Upcoming Elections

Frequent Elections and Political Divisions

EIGHTH ELECTION IN FIVE YEARS

The previous government resigned in December after weeks of street protests over its economic policies and perceived failure to tackle corruption. This month's snap election will be the eighth in just five years for the EU and NATO member state amid deep political divisions.

Coalition Building and Political Landscape

With polls indicating that no party will win a majority, Gyurov - who previously worked as a deputy governor of the Bulgarian National Bank - urged politicians to concentrate on building solid coalitions that would allow Bulgaria to have a stable government. 

Recent surveys show the Progressive Bulgaria centre-left coalition of former President Rumen Radev leading voting intentions with around 30% of the vote. Radev resigned as president in January to compete in the elections.

Anti-Corruption Pledges and Rule of Law Concerns

He has pledged to tackle graft in a country where prosecutors allege that hundreds of millions of euros in European funds have been diverted into the pockets of businessmen and officials, and public tenders have been fixed.

This week a report by the Civil Liberties Union for Europe, a Berlin-based human rights watchdog, ranked Bulgaria as one of five European countries that are undermining the rule of law.

Future Reforms and Isolating Corrupt Influence

Need for Judicial Reforms

Gyurov accepted that many aspects of society were undermined by corruption, including freedom of the press, and he said future governments would need to undertake judicial reforms.

Targeting Oligarchic Influence

"There should not be people, oligarchs, that are able to influence the political processes in the country," he said, identifying businessman and politician Delyan Peevski, who is under U.S. and UK sanctions for corruption, as one such individual.

"What we have shown as a government in recent weeks and months is that...the influence of such people can be fully isolated from the public political process."

(Reporting by Daniel Flynn; Additional reporting by Ed McAllister; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

Key Takeaways

  • Caretaker PM Andrey Gyurov, a former central banker, pledged fair and transparent elections on April 19—the eighth national vote since 2021—as Bulgaria struggles with chronic instability (apnews.com).
  • Authorities have ramped up enforcement against vote‑buying, with dozens arrested carrying cash and name lists—moves Gyurov argues illustrate a break from past tolerance of electoral corruption (apnews.com).
  • This election follows the December resignation of the previous government amid protests over corruption and economic policy, and takes place in a highly fragmented political context—no party is expected to win a majority, underscoring pressure to form stable coalitions (aljazeera.com).

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What measures has Bulgaria's caretaker government taken against corruption?
The government has arrested dozens linked to vote buying, increased reporting of corruption, and is taking action to clean up elections.
Why did Bulgaria's previous government resign?
The previous administration resigned in December after weeks of street protests over economic policies and failure to tackle corruption.

Tags

Related Articles

More from Headlines

Explore more articles in the Headlines category