MASS PROTESTS IN SOFIA AND OTHER BULGARIAN CITIES AGAINST THE RULING COALITION’S
BUDGET PLANS FORCED THE GOVERNMENT TO BACKTRACK ON A BILL THAT WOULD HAVE
INCREASED INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTIONS TO PENSIONS AND SOCIAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
~ Camilo Márquez, Política Obrera ~
The demonstrations were organised by opposition parties that lack broad public
support: “The budget bill included tax and pension increases and greater
borrowing to finance public spending” (La Nación, December 2). It projected a 3%
deficit and a minimum wage of €620 per month.
President Rumen Radev has held office since 2017 with limited powers in foreign
policy and defence. Real power rests with the head of government, Prime Minister
Rosen Zhelyazkov, a member of the Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria
(GERB) party, who assumed office on January 16, 2025. The government is a
fragile and highly divergent alliance comprising the pro-European Union
centre-right, the pro-Russian Bulgarian Socialist Party, and another
nationalist-leaning party. This Frankenstein coalition is the latest experiment
aimed at putting the country back on track after a prolonged period of political
instability. Bulgarians have gone to the polls seven times since 2021 to elect a
parliament that has been paralysed by a succession of coalitions led by various
centre-right and right-wing parties.
“The scale of the December 1 demonstrations surprised everyone. Unusually, they
were not confined to Sofia. Crowds gathered in numerous towns and cities across
Bulgaria.” (Reporteri 2/12). Several factors appear to have contributed to
Bulgaria’s decision to adopt the euro on January 1st, though this remains to be
seen: “The coming months are extremely important for Bulgaria’s political
direction,” stated the prime minister, who warned that “the adoption of the euro
is not guaranteed,” reports the Bulgarian newspaper, The Telegraph. The
potential entry into the common zone has sparked fears among the population of
the Balkan country of a sharp rise in prices. Bulgaria is the poorest country in
the European Union and ranks second in corruption, only behind Hungary.
This year, Bulgaria joined the Schengen Area, a European zone of free movement
of people without internal border controls between member countries. With
European rearmament, this area has a military counterpart: a “military
Schengen,” whose objective is to facilitate the free movement of troops and
equipment throughout the bloc, particularly eastward, as a contingency plan
against Russia. Beneath the surface of this integration, a fierce battle is
being waged for the spoils of Ukraine between France, Germany, and Poland. The
latter is driving the so-called “Three Seas Initiative,” which connects the
territories between the Baltic, Adriatic, and Black Seas, where Bulgaria plays a
key role. Warsaw’s aim is to use this lever to facilitate the extraction of
Ukrainian wealth across this vast territory and, at the same time, to lead the
costly plan to “contain” Russia, bypassing and opposing France and Germany.
Moscow has already labelled this ostensibly economic “initiative” as a series of
military logistics projects hostile to its interests.
The country’s president, the pro-Russian Rumen Radev, called for the
government’s resignation and new elections during the protests. The government
was forced to abandon the draft budget the morning after the protests.
All of Eastern Europe is on the front lines of this conflict.
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Machine translation
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