Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

The voting abroad was crucial for the final results of the election

The expectations of a massive wave of voters in Turkey were proved wrong

Author:
Photo: BGNES

The 11 July snap election is now history but analyses of the election results still dominate the media. In anticipation of the official constitution of the 46th National Assembly, we take a rather different view and analyze the way our compatriots living abroad voted.

In the words of sociologist from Gallup sociological agency Parvan Simeonov, the number of people who cast their vote abroad is around 180,000 – comparable to the number who voted in the parliamentary election in April even though an additional 300 polling stations were set up outside Bulgaria.

“Quite a lot of the Bulgarians abroad are in Bulgaria at the moment, and it seems there are quite a lot of people who saw no point in going to the polls this time around,” the sociologist commented in an interview for Radio Bulgaria.

He says that “the votes abroad were crucial for the final results of the elections” and the victory by ITN (There Is such a People) of showman and TV host Slavi Trifonov, but that the expectations of a “massive wave of voters in Turkey” were proved wrong. There are several explanations for this:

“With the coming of new generations the political process grows more and more political,” Parvan Simeonov says. “All parties of the status quo are losing votes. GERB lost 200,000, the United Patriots – from 200,000 votes at the previous elections in April are now down to 80,000. I am sure the same is true of the Movement for Rights and Freedoms (MRF). Of course, with GERB and the MRF the restriction of some predictable votes also played a role. That, however, does not reverse the fact that in Turkey itself, the MRF did not achieve an outstanding result. Evidently there are now voters in Turkey who do not subscribe to the idea of some kind of mechanical commitment to that party.”

The explanation why the results of the so-called system parties abroad were so low may lie in the fact that the generation of Bulgarians living abroad, which is part of the process of outward labour migration, cast “protest” votes, rather than voting for the status quo.  Because more often than not it is the status quo that drove them to emigrate in the first place with no thought of returning to Bulgaria permanently.

As if to corroborate the fact that his party is definitely anti-system, without even waiting for the final results of the election to be announced, ITN’s leader Slavi Trifonov announced the composition of the government he intends to nominate to be voted by parliament. Its members, and the way this information was announced – from the screen of his own, private TV channel – came as a nasty surprise for practically all parties which will be part of the new parliament. Their leaders accused him of shunning dialogue and of aiming to replace the model now in place with a model that is very similar. And though logical, the move by the victor in these elections of assuming the entire responsibility by himself is something familiar to Bulgarians and is actually going out of fashion, as that is what Boyko Borissov did at the beginning of his first term of office in 2009, says Parvan Simeonov.

The fact that there are young people in the draft cabinet, with an education and experience in various spheres acquired abroad, is a well-worn practice, applied by the governments in the 2001-2009 period but this kind of déjà-vu is something people have grown weary of. Still, it is a good attempt at inclusion of the Bulgarians abroad, and, in the words of Parvan Simeonov, “we very much need them.” The search for people with such a profile will continue, the sociologist says:

“Regrettably, we Bulgarians have a very serious and deeply ingrained national inferiority complex. We are accustomed to always having to catch up with someone, and when we happen to succeed we just can’t believe it. Sometimes we are losers because that is how we perceive ourselves. This deep-going complex has its roots in history. We lost the wars for national unification and that has been such a major trauma down the years that Bulgarians who are successful abroad have come to be our biggest ideal.”



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Sevar Ognyanov

Bulgarians in Greece - fewer and increasingly apathetic at the polls

There are 23 polling stations where Bulgarians can vote in Greece today. They are five less than their number in the previous election on June 9 this year. The most sections – five – were opened on the island of Crete . They are located in..

published on 10/27/24 4:27 PM
D-r Tsvetan Tsenkov

A pediatrician is the chairman of the only polling station in Kuwait

Completely calm and normal, according to the law, the election day is taking place in the only open polling station in Kuwait. The Bulgarian community in the Arab country numbers about 300-350 people , mostly highly educated specialists in the fields..

published on 10/27/24 2:50 PM
The polling station in Brisbane

The Bulgarians living "Down Under" give their vote for hope

"The last one to quit wins. If we believe and want democracy in Bulgaria to win..., we must persevere, even though it's discouraging," Izabela Shopova from Brisbane, Australia tells Radio Bulgaria Nearly 6,000 people identified themselves as..

published on 10/27/24 2:05 PM