Bulgarian presidential election, 2006

Bulgarian presidential election, 2006

2001 ←
22 October and 29 October 2006
→ 2011

 
Nominee Georgi Parvanov Volen Siderov
Party Triple coalition ATAKA
Popular vote 2,050,488 649,387
Percentage 75.9% 24.1%

The 2006 Bulgarian presidential election (Bulgarian: Избори за президент на България 2006, Izbori za prezident na Balgariya 2006) was held on 22 October 2006, as decided on 27 July 2006 by the Bulgarian Parliament.[1] The runoff took place on 29 October 2006, while the electoral campaign spanned 19 September–20 October. At the election, Georgi Parvanov won his second term as President of Bulgaria.

Some of the right-wing parties were disunited at the time but still chose to support a common candidate, Nedelcho Beronov. Prime minister and head of the Socialist Party Sergey Stanishev expressed his strong support for the current president, Georgi Parvanov, in July 2006,[2] and Parvanov officially stated his desire to run for a second term on 25 August 2006.[3] He was also backed by the other two members of the then rulling Triple coalition - NDSV and DPS.

In the first round, incumbent Georgi Parvanov received 64% of the vote, ahead of nationalist leader Volen Siderov who came second with 21.5%.[4] Parvanov had to face him in a runoff, as Bulgarian law requires a turnout of 50% for a president to be elected in the first round.[5] The voter turnout in the first round was 42.51%.[6] The defeated right-wing forces called for abstention, while some far left formations expressed their support for Siderov.

The second round saw a decisive Parvanov victory of around 75.9% as opposed to Siderov's 24.1%,[7] meaning that Parvanov became the first person to be democratically re-elected as President of Bulgaria.[8] The turnout was 41.21%.[6]

Contents

Results

e • d Summary of the 2006 Bulgarian presidential election results
Candidate Party First round Second round
Votes % Votes %
Georgi Parvanov Bulgarian Socialist Party 1,780,119 64.047% 2,050,488 75.948%
Volen Siderov National Union Attack 597,175 21.486% 649,387 24.052%
Nedelcho Beronov United Democratic Forces 271,078 9.753%
Georgi Markov Order, Law and Justice 75,478 2.716%
Petar Beron Initiative committee 21,812 0.785%
Grigor Velev Аll in one Bulgaria 19,857 0.714%
Lyuben Petrov Initiative committee 13,854 0.498%
Total valid votes 2,779,373 100.000% 2,699,875 100.000%
  runoff
  failed to reach the runoff

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ Darik.net (2006-07-27). "На 22 октомври гласуваме за президент, реши парламентът". Netinfo. http://netinfo.bg/?tid=40&oid=914555. Retrieved 2006-10-22. 
  2. ^ Yotova, Boryana (2006-07-28). "Станишев: Победата на Първанов е важна за утвърждаване на кабинета" (in Bulgarian). Mediapool. http://www.mediapool.bg/show/?storyid=119915. Retrieved 2006-10-22. 
  3. ^ "Инициативен комитет издигна кандидатурата на Георги Първанов за втори президентски мандат" (in Bulgarian). President.bg. 2006-08-25. http://www.president.bg/news.php?id=2683&st=0. Retrieved 2006-10-22. 
  4. ^ "Elections 2006: Final results for the country according to the Central Electoral Commission for the President and Vice President Elections" (in Bulgarian). Izbori2006.org. http://www.izbori2006.org/results_1/. Retrieved 2006-10-24. 
  5. ^ "Bulgaria's Parvanov wins 1st round presidential poll". Reuters. 2006-10-22. http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-10-22T171346Z_01_L22677436_RTRUKOC_0_US-BULGARIA-ELECTION.xml&pageNumber=0&imageid=&cap=&sz=13&WTModLoc=NewsArt-C1-ArticlePage2. Retrieved 2006-10-22. 
  6. ^ a b "Elections 2006: Voter turnout for the country as of 7 pm" (in Bulgarian). Izbori2006.org. http://www.izbori2006.org/activity/. Retrieved 2006-10-30. 
  7. ^ "Elections 2006: Final results for the country according to the Central Electoral Commission for the President and Vice President Elections" (in Bulgarian). Izbori2006.org. http://www.izbori2006.org/results_2/. Retrieved 2006-10-30. 
  8. ^ Zhelyu Zhelev, although having served two terms, was elected as a president not by popular vote, but by the National Assembly for his first term.

External links