GERB-UDF MP Raya Nazaryan was elected National Assembly Chair on Thursday. She received 131 votes in favour, 66 MPs voted against, and 39 abstained, BTA reports.
Nazaryan was backed by her parliamentary group, the Movement for Rights and Freedoms (MRF) and There is Such a People (TISP).
Four MPs were nominated for head of Parliament. Here is how the legislature voted on the other three: Silvi Kirilov of TISP: 17 votes in favour, 108 against, and 108 abstentions. Petar Petrov of Vazrazhdane: 53 votes in favour, 111 against, and 71 abstentions. Yuliana Mateeva of Velichie (Grandeur): 13 votes in favour, 105 against, and 105 abstentions.
Under the Constitution, electing a chairperson of the National Assembly requires a simple majority of the MPs present. GERB-UDF have 68 seats, the Movement for Rights and Freedoms 47, Continue the Change - Democratic Bulgaria 39, Vazrazhdane 38, BSP for Bulgaria 19, TISP 16, and Velichie 13.
Bio
Born in Varna (on the Black Sea) on September 16, 1985, Nazaryan has practised law for more than 12 years, of which ten specializing in the law of obligations, real law, insurance law, family law and succession law. She has amassed ample experience in commercial, civil and administrative proceedings before Bulgarian courts.
A specialist in mediation and out-of-court settlement of legal disputes. Member of the Sofia Bar Association. Associate and co-founder of a law firm.
On June 9, Nazaryan was elected MP for a third term. She topped the GERB-UDF candidates list in Sofia's Multimember Constituency No. 24. She entered politics in 2022.
She is single, with one child.
Comments
"Unless a National Assembly chair is elected, a constitutional crisis will ensue and we will not be even able to go ahead with elections," GERB leader Boyko Borissov told journalists at Parliament on Thursday.
Asked whether elections are drawing nearer, Borissov said that it is a matter of sheer technology: "we need to elect a head of Parliament who should send us to elections. We can't do even this now," he commented.
Asked whether it was a mistake to make the approval of a cabinet on the first mandate contingent on the election of a National Assembly chair, he said that "this not a mistake at all, historically the largest political force is entitled to render up a chair. One thing is contingent on the other because the [cabinet-forming] negotiations cannot take place without a head of Parliament."
Earlier in the day, MRF leader Delyan Peevski told journalists: "Let us try to put together a normal Euro-Atlantic government, to keep Bulgaria on its road rather than gift it to Putin [. . .] Let the constitutional procedure of [handing cabinet-forming] mandates go ahead, and if it fails, elections will follow," he added.