Bulgarian lawmakers approve government resignation, snap election looks likely

Dec ⁠12 (Reuters) – Bulgarian lawmakers formally approved on Friday the ⁠resignation of the country’s minority government, a day after it bowed to mass street ⁠protests and said it would quit, paving the way for talks on forming a new ​coalition or most likely a snap election.

Prime Minister Rosen ‍Zhelyakov’s government announced on Thursday it would step down after weeks of street protests against state corruption and a new budget that would have hiked social security contributions and taxes ​on dividends.

The decision comes just three weeks before the Black Sea nation of 6.7 million people is due to join the euro zone on January 1.

All 227 lawmakers attending ​Friday’s session of the 240-member chamber voted in favour of the government’s ⁠resignation.

They are also expected later on Friday to approve a revised ‌2026 budget on its first reading.

President Rumen Radev, who himself had urged the government to ⁠resign, will now hand the largest party ​in parliament, GERB, the mandate to form a new government. However ‌its leader, Boyko Borissov, has indicated it will turn down the mandate.

In such a scenario, unless two other ‍parties accept the mandate to form a government, Radev will appoint an interim administration and call a snap election. This could pitch Bulgaria back into a cycle of repeated polls if no one can form a functioning coalition.

Bulgaria, a member of NATO and the European Union, has held seven national elections in the past four years as successive governments failed to keep ⁠control of a fractured parliament.

(Reporting by ‌Daria Sito-SucicEditing by Gareth ⁠Jones)