Bulgarians vote in presidential runoff election
People in Bulgaria have headed to the polls to elect a new president in a runoff set to determine whether the country will politically tilt to the East or West.
The choice on Sunday is between pro-Russia Rumen Radev, 53, backed by the opposition Socialist Party, and the speaker of parliament, Tsetska Tsacheva, a 58-year-old lawyer and member of Prime Minister Boiko Borisov’s pro-European Union (EU) center-right party.
In the first round of the voting, Radev won 25 percent of the votes followed closely by Tsacheva, who bagged 22 percent.
Borisov, whose Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria (GERB) Party, has won all national elections in the last decade, says he will resign if Tsacheva loses the runoff, opening the way to early parliamentary elections.
Radev, on the other side, is a military commander who has attracted many Bulgarians fed up with government corruption and graft.
A former NATO fighter pilot, Radev has pledged to maintain Bulgaria’s membership in NATO but has also said that “being pro-European does not mean being anti-Russian.”
SS