Market
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1008 respondents
The next General Election in Bulgaria is expected in 2030.
Based on the Market projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 0.0% of the parliamentary seats.
According to the latest national poll in Bulgaria by Market, GERB leads with 24.1%. They are followed by PP: 18.9%, Vŭzrazhdane: 12.4%, DPS: 12.3%, BSP: 7.3%, MECh: 7.1%, APS: 4.3%, Velichie: 3.6% and ITN: 3.2%. Other parties secure 6.8% of the votes.
Market achieved a PolitPro Score of ? out of 100.
On average, Market's figures deviate by percentage points between their final pre-election polls and actual election results.
The electoral threshold for the Bulgarian election is 4%.
According to Market data, 7 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter Bulgaria's parliament: GERB with 67 representatives, PP with 53 representatives, Vŭzrazhdane with 34 representatives, DPS with 34 representatives, BSP with 20 representatives, MECh with 20 representatives and APS with 12 representatives.
The Bulgarian National Assembly (Narodno Sabranie) comprises 240 members, elected for a four-year term. Its electoral system employs proportional representation with closed lists across 31 multi-member constituencies. Since 2021, Bulgaria has significantly expanded the use of voting machines in larger polling stations to enhance transparency and minimize manual counting errors. Seat allocation follows the Hare-Niemeyer method, ensuring a mathematically precise reflection of the national voter will.
To enter the Bulgarian Parliament, parties must clear a nationwide electoral threshold of 4% of the valid votes. This hurdle applies uniformly to individual parties and party alliances. While independent candidates face a different calculation threshold at the constituency level, this rarely occurs in practice. The 4% threshold aims to prevent excessive parliamentary fragmentation and facilitate the formation of stable governing coalitions within Bulgaria's often dynamic political landscape.
Forming a government in Bulgaria requires an absolute majority of the members present in Parliament. The President successively grants the mandate to form a government to the three strongest parliamentary groups if prior attempts fail. Given that proportional representation often results in a multi-party parliament, coalitions or parliamentary support agreements are the norm. Negotiations typically center on a shared agenda for judicial reform, economic policy, and integration into European structures like the Eurozone and Schengen Area.