HomeEUBulgaria eyes snap election after main parties refuse mandate to form government

Bulgaria eyes snap election after main parties refuse mandate to form government

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SOFIA, Jan 16 (Reuters) - ​President Rumen Radev said on Friday Bulgaria will hold a snap election after leading parties refused a mandate to form a ⁠government following the previous administration's resignationamid widespread protests. 

Radev on Friday offered the Alliance for Rights and Freedoms the last chance ‍to try to form a government but it declined the request, the third ​to do so this week, setting the stage for snap elections, the eighth in the past four years.

None of the parties in ​question command enough seats in a fragmented parliament to put together a stable majority.

"We are going to elections," Radev said.

Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov's coalition, backed by the biggest parliamentary group GERB-SDS, resigned last month after weeks of street protests ‌against endemic state corruption and a new budget that would have ‌increased some taxes.

His exit, which came shortly before Bulgaria joined the euro zone on ​January 1, triggered a constitutional process which saw both GERB-SDS and the reformist PP-DB rejecting Radev's offer to set up ‌a ruling coalition this week.

With the Alliance for Rights and Freedoms also ⁠declining his offer on Friday, Radev will now have ‌to appoint a caretaker cabinet ​and set a date for snap elections.

Bulgaria, the poorest member of the European Union, sorely needs political stability to speed up the ⁠intake of EU ⁠funds into its creaking infrastructure, to encourage foreign investment and root ​out systemic corruption.

(Reporting by Stoyan Nenov; writing by Edward McAllister and Angeliki Koutantou; editing by ‌Alison Williams and Mark Heinrich)

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