Bulgarian Socialists Rally to Demand Early Election
SOFIA (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of supporters of Bulgaria's opposition Socialist Party (BSP) rallied on Saturday to protest poverty and corruption and demand an early election.
The next election is due in 2021 and a snap vote is unlikely, according to analysts. But a survey by independent pollster Alpha Research showed support for the ruling GERB party has slipped since an election in March 2017, giving opposition parties hope.
The Socialists accused Prime Minister Boyko Borissov's government of indifference to deepening poverty and failing to put corrupt officials behind bars since taking office last May.
"It is time not only to say 'resignation' but to work for early elections," said Sergei Stanishev, president of the Party of European Socialists and a former Socialist leader.
"I am convinced that BSP will win this election," he told supporters, who waved red and national flags. The annual rally took place at the Mount of Buzludzha in central Bulgaria near the round, concrete, memorial house for the country's communist party.
Bulgaria was ranked the European Union's most corrupt country in Transparency International's 2017 index and Brussels criticises it for failing to combat organized crime and convict corrupt high-level officials.
Corruption has reduced foreign investment and has prompted some EU countries to oppose Sofia's entry into the Schengen zone of passport-free travel and to the euro zone.
Roads below Buzludzha in the Stara Planina mountains, where the foundations of the Socialist movement in Bulgaria were laid in 1891, turned into a sea of red for a rally that organisers said attracted 74,000 people.
BSP leader Korneliya Ninova vowed that her party would make improve living standards if it returns...
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