When reason sleeps, demons dance. At the Bulgarian elections held on Sunday, ultra-nationalists, far-right and pro-Russian forces obtained disturbing results. Bulgaria has been unable to form a viable government over the last three years. This election is the seventh in a row in this period, with analysts warning that another failure would signal a collapse of democracy. While the support for mainstream parties declined dramatically, illustrated by the falling number of voters who support them, the extremist parties are gaining ground. The anti-EU and openly pro-Russian party Vazrazhdane (Revival) was close to stealing the second place from the reformist ‘We continue the Change – Democratic Bulgaria’, the ultra-nationalist Velichie (Greatness) crossed the electoral barrier for a second time, and for the first time another jingoistic force, MECH (Sword) will be represented in parliament. On its website, the MECH party promotes itself as "the first truly pro-Bulgarian party in the modern history of Bulgaria." "We are not vassals of any embassy, and the interests of the Bulgarian people will be our top priority," MECH says. One reason Bulgaria is unable to form a government is that long-serving former prime minister Boyko Borissov, whose GERB party usually comes first, is not a desired partner for other mainstream parties. Bulgaria’s modern history has been marked by protests against him and Delyan Peevski, the most powerful and arguably the most toxic politicians of their time. |