“The situation is complicated, so it should be approached slowly and carefully, but there will be a cabinet. Borisov is ready with proposals. Yes, he will set conditions, he wants to make a cabinet from parties. I assume that the other participants in the National Assembly will be more inclined to technical, expert or other type of cabinet, in which “We continue the change – Democratic Bulgaria” can also join. There are several majorities”, commented the political scientist Prof. Maria Pirgova in the studio of “The Day ON AIR”.
According to the journalist Petyo Blaskov, Boyko Borisov played a brilliant political move with the doors open to everyone in the name of having a government.
“Now there will be some silence and analysis from the other political centers. It is better for them to reduce the analysis and think about the development of such an offer. With the minority government, the responsibility is clear, the control is easily feasible,” Bluskov added for Bulgaria ON AIR.
Such an office is difficult, pointed out Prof. Pirgova, but one must also think about whether it will be good for the majority of the population.
“It has different needs. I see Borisov’s brilliant move today, but I am worried that GERB has gone to the extreme right in its program, wanting to satisfy all the criteria for the Eurozone. This means restrictions, imposing a low budget deficit. Belt-tightening is next. We will a very right-wing coalition has formed. I see a government made up of GERB, DPS and BSP,” predicted the political scientist.
Some of the compromises can lead to serious troubles on the one hand, and on the other – to blur responsibility, Bluskov stressed.
“The holding of so many elections is rooted in the absence of a face for the Bulgarian political parties. They do not have a political face. Elections in Bulgaria are turning into political zealots. It is important for GERB to build their political doctrine. This also applies to the left group,” said the journalist .
Our parties are usually not related to the citizens, according to the guests.
“Parties are divided lobbies. The electorates who went to vote are clients – people who have some interest in this particular party winning,” Prof. Pirgova believes.