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Bulgaria election: Ex-President Radev’s party leads in early results 

19 April 2026
This content originally appeared on Al Jazeera.
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Former President Rumen Radev’s centre-left Progressive Bulgaria party is leading in the country’s parliamentary election, according to early official results.

Bulgarians cast their ballots on Sunday for the eighth time in five years, after mass protests led to the removal of the previous conservative government in December.

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With 32 percent of votes countries, Progressive Bulgaria was in the lead with 44.59 percent, preliminary results showed in the early hours of Monday.

Earlier, an updated exit poll conducted by Sofia-based Alpha Research showed Radev’s party winning 44 percent of the vote, according to the Reuters news agency.

Former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov’s conservative GERB was trailing in second place with 12.5 percent of the vote, the exit poll showed, while the reformist We Continue the Change-Democratic Bulgaria (PP-DB) coalition was projected to finish third. Radev said he would be willing to work with them, but a minority government was also an option.

Borissov wrote in a post on Facebook: “Elections decide who comes first, but negotiations will decide who governs.”

Former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov casts his vote in a polling station in Bankya, Bulgaria, Sunday, April 19, 2026, during early parliamentary elections. (AP Photo/Valentina Petrova)
Former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov casts his vote in a polling station in Bankya, Bulgaria, on April 19, 2026 [Valentina Petrova/AP]

Radev, a left-leaning eurosceptic, stepped down from the presidency in January, after nine years, to launch his bid to become prime minister. He had backed the anticorruption protests that saw hundreds of thousands of largely young people take to the streets in December, and promised to get rid of the “oligarchic governance model”.

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“We will do everything possible not to allow us to go [to elections] again. It is ruinous for Bulgaria,” Radev told reporters after the exit poll was released. “We are ready to consider different options so that Bulgaria can have a regular and stable government.”

The Balkan country has seen fragmented parliaments in recent years, with coalitions failing to last more than a year since 2021.

Radev has called for renewing ties with Moscow and criticised supplying Ukraine with weapons to fend off Russia’s invasion. He also opposed the 10-year defence agreement signed between Bulgaria and Ukraine in March, and has been accused by critics of being too pro-Russian.

Bulgaria’s election comes in the wake of Viktor Orban’s defeat in Hungary last week after 16 years in power. The right-wing prime minister lost to Péter Magyar’s centre-leaning opposition Tisza party, which swept 70 percent of the seats in parliament.

Bulgaria joined the European Union in 2007 and adopted the euro as its currency in January this year.