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Progressive Bulgaria
Прогресивна България
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|---|---|
| Abbreviation | PB |
| Leader | Rumen Radev |
| Co-chairs | Galab Donev Dimitar Stoyanov Elena Noneva Todor Barbolov Atanas Kalchev |
| Founder | Rumen Radev |
| Founded | 2 March 2026 (coalition) 17 April 2026 (party) |
| Ideology | |
| Political position | Centre-left[10] to left-wing[11] |
| Member parties | PDS SDP DNN External support: VMRO-BND |
| Colors |
Dark green[12] White |
| National Assembly |
0 / 240
|
| European Parliament |
0 / 17
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| Website | |
| progresivnabulgaria.com | |
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Progressive Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Прогресивна България, romanized: Progresivna Balgariya, PB) is a left-wing nationalist[6] and populist[5] political coalition in Bulgaria consisting of three political parties. The coalition is led by former President Rumen Radev, who founded it to contest the 2026 Bulgarian parliamentary election. The coalition was presented on 2 March 2026.[13] On April 17, the coalition was declared a party at a founding congress in Veliko Tarnovo.[14][15] In the 2026 election, the coalition won a majority of seats in the National Assembly.
History
Formation
On 2 March 2026, documents for a coalition called "Progressive Bulgaria" were submitted to the Central Electoral Commission of Bulgaria. The coalition included the following parties: the Political Movement "Social Democrats", led by Elena Noneva; the Social Democratic Party, led by Todor Barbolov; and the Our People Movement, led by Atanas Kalchev. Radev himself did not submit the documents; this was done by former Interim Prime Minister Galab Donev and former Defense Minister Dimitar Stoyanov.[16][17][18] It was announced that Radev would not be part of the Progressive Bulgaria leadership; instead, Donev and Stoyanov would become co-chairs, as well as the leaders of the three mandate-carrier parties.[13]
On 11 March, it was revealed that candidates from VMRO – Bulgarian National Movement would enter the lists of PB. According to party leader Krasimir Karakachanov, there is no formal agreement on the participation of VMRO candidates in the lists of "Progressive Bulgaria", but it was not ruled out that individual representatives would be included in them.[19][20] The party had earlier announced its support for the coalition in a decision by the party's organizational council.[21]
Ideology
Progressive Bulgaria has been described as left-wing populist,[5] left-wing nationalist,[6] and left-wing conservative.[1] Bulgarian political scientist Antoaneta Hristova stated that the coalition demonstrates a centre-left and social democratic political profile.[8] It combines left-wing economic policies such as increasing pensions and state-owned healthcare with social conservatism and sovereigntism.[2] The party's ideology has been described as putting Bulgarian national interests first; it does not question Bulgaria's membership in the European Union and NATO,[22] but plans to take a "more assertive" stance on energy, climate, and budget policies.[9]
Publicist Yavor Siderov described Radev as a populist.[25] In a Facebook post, Radev deemed his coalition "a response to Bulgarians' expectations for the dismantling of the oligarchic corruption model".[13] As president, Radev has questioned Bulgaria's 2026 adoption of the euro and opposed sanctions against the Russian Federation.[26] He, as well as the coalition itself, have been described as pro-Russian and sceptical of Ukraine in the context of the Russo-Ukrainian war, although this description is disputed, with Radev stating during his 2026 campaign that he would not veto EU aid to Kyiv if elected;[30] however, he has repeatedly spoken against supplying weapons to Ukraine and criticized security agreements with the country.[31]
Polish political scientist Jan Nowinowski described the party as similar to the Slovak party Direction – Social Democracy, led by Prime Minister Robert Fico; according to Nowinowski, Progressive Bulgaria offers pro-social and interventionist economic postulates and has conservative views in other spheres. He described the party as "nationalist, and at times sovereigntist", "verging on populism", and campaigning on anti-corruption, judicial reform, and fatigue with the political elite.[1] OKO.press argues that the alliance is "not strictly speaking a left-wing party in the European sense", but rather a kind of a "populist-nationalist left".[5] The Centre for Eastern Studies described the party as centre-left conservative,[3] and with a "centre-left but socially conservative profile".[9] Newsweek characterized the party in similar terms:
Nominally, Progressive Bulgaria is a centre-left party. But this left-wing stance is expressed mainly through socioeconomic promises; ideologically, the party is traditionalist. Central to its message are pledges to fight corruption; its slogans are otherwise very general, couched in populist language. To compare it to anything, it would be SMER — the party of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, which was long part of the Socialist International but was recently expelled from it. Like SMER, Progressive Bulgaria represents the interests of the poorest, whilst also promoting nationalist slogans.[32]
Composition
Member parties
| Party | Abbr. | Ideology | Leader | Member since | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Progressive Bulgaria (party) | PB | Left-conservatism | Rumen Radev | 17 April 2026 | |
| Political Movement "Social Democrats" | PDS | Social democracy | Elena Noneva | 2 March 2026 | |
| Social Democratic Party | SDP | Social democracy | Todor Barbolov | 2 March 2026 | |
| Our People Movement | DNN | Atanas Kalchev | 2 March 2026 | ||
Supporting parties
| Party | Abbr. | Ideology | Leader | Supporting since | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VMRO – Bulgarian National Movement[19][20] | VMRO-BND | National conservatism | Krasimir Karakachanov | 11 March 2026 | |
See also
- 2025–2026 Bulgarian protests, for events that preceded the formation of the party
- Alternative for Bulgarian Revival
- List of political parties in Bulgaria
References
- ^ a b c Nowinowski, Jan (18 April 2026). Lehmann, Alicja (ed.). "Bułgarzy pójdą do urn ósmy raz w ciągu 5 lat. W sondażach prowadzi flirtujący z Rosją Radew". Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish). Interviewed by Wyrwik, Anna. [Bulgarians will go to the polls for the eighth time in five years. Radew, who has been seen to be courting Russia, is leading in the polls]
- ^ a b Kandilarov, Evgeniy (9 April 2026). "The Electoral Attitudes of the Bulgarians a month before the early Parliamentary Elections" (PDF). Monthly Briefing. 14 (1). China-CEE Institute: 5. ISSN 3058-1214.
- ^ a b Nowinowski, Jan (10 April 2026). Nowe szaty prezydenta. Bułgaria przed wyborami parlamentarnymi [A new look for the president. Bulgaria ahead of the general election] (PDF). Komentarze OSW (Report) (in Polish). Centre for Eastern Studies. p. 7.
- ^ [1][2][3]
- ^ a b c d e
Jędral, Paweł (18 April 2026). "Bułgaria kontra dezinformacja. Czy wpływy Rosji zakłócą niedzielne wybory parlamentarne?" [Bulgaria versus disinformation. Will Russian influence disrupt Sunday’s parliamentary elections?]. OKO.press (in Polish).
Progresywna Bułgaria nie jest do końca partią lewicową w europejskim rozumieniu. To bardziej rodzaj lewicy populistyczno-narodowej, powiązanej ze środowiskami post-sowieckimi. Partie tego typu znamy z państw takich, jak np. Mołdawia.
[Progressive Bulgaria is not strictly speaking a left-wing party in the European sense. It is instead a variety of the populist-nationalist left with links to post-Soviet circles. We are familiar with parties of this kind from countries such as Moldova.] - ^ a b c
Stier, Frank; Israel, Stephan (17 April 2026). "Elections in Bulgaria: Kremlin-friendly former president is the frontrunner". Table Media.
Bulgaria's former president, Rumen Radev, has a good chance of becoming the leading political force on Sunday with his left-wing nationalist party, Progressive Bulgaria (PB).
- ^ [6][5]
- ^ a b
Христова, Антоанета (2 March 2026). "Проф. Христова за "Прогресивна България": Името на формацията насочва към център-ляво и към социалдемокрация". Focus News (in Bulgarian). Interviewed by Събчева, Цоня.
Името на формацията насочва към център-ляво и към социалдемокрация. Така че нещата от гледна точка на идеология като че ли са доста ясно демонстрирани и очертани. Социалдемокрацията, на практика тази ниша, реално не е запълнена до този момент добре.
[The name of the formation points to the center-left and to social democracy. So, from an ideological point of view, things seem to be quite clearly demonstrated and outlined. Social democracy, in practice, this niche has not really been filled well before.] - ^ a b c Nowinowski, Jan (10 April 2026). The president’s new clothes: Bulgaria ahead of parliamentary elections. OSW Commentary (Report). Centre for Eastern Studies.
- ^
-
Atanasova, Maria (3 March 2026). "Antoaneta Hristova: Rumen Radev's "Progressive Bulgaria" takes over the left niche". Fakti.bg.
According to experts, Rumen Radev's actions give a categorical signal about the political orientation of the new project, which is aimed directly at the voters of the centenary. "This is a firm message, there is no doubt what it can be. This is a center-left political party. This is the niche that the BSP has gradually vacated," Antoaneta Hristova is categorical.
-
Христова, Антоанета (2 March 2026). "Проф. Христова за "Прогресивна България": Името на формацията насочва към център-ляво и към социалдемокрация". Focus News (in Bulgarian). Interviewed by Събчева, Цоня.
Името на формацията насочва към център-ляво и към социалдемокрация. Така че нещата от гледна точка на идеология като че ли са доста ясно демонстрирани и очертани. Социалдемокрацията, на практика тази ниша, реално не е запълнена до този момент добре.
[The name of the formation points to the center-left and to social democracy. So, from an ideological point of view, things seem to be quite clearly demonstrated and outlined. Social democracy, in practice, this niche has not really been filled well before.] -
Freches, David (19 April 2026). "Wieder wählen, wieder Patt - mehr Russlandnähe?" [Another election, another deadlock – a closer alignment with Russia?]. Tagesschau (in German).
Die Rede ist von Ex-Staatspräsident Rumen Radev und seinem neuen Mitte-Links-Bündnis Progressives Bulgarien.
[We are talking about former President Rumen Radev and his new centre-left alliance, Progressive Bulgaria.] -
Stör, Christian (18 April 2026). "Letzte Umfragen vor der Bulgarien-Wahl 2026 deuten Trend an" [Latest polls ahead of the 2026 Bulgarian election point to a trend]. Frankfurter Rundschau (in German).
Ex-Präsident Rumen Radew liegt in der Gunst der Wählerinnen und Wähler relativ deutlich an der Spitze. Erst im Januar war er von seinem Amt zurückgetreten, um bei der Parlamentswahl als Spitzenkandidat des Mitte-Links-Bündnisses „Progressives Bulgarien" (PB) anzutreten.
[Former President Rumen Radev holds a relatively clear lead in the polls. He stepped down from office as recently as January in order to stand as the lead candidate for the centre-left alliance “Progressive Bulgaria” (PB) in the parliamentary elections.] -
"Achte Wahl in fünf Jahren: Vorgezogene Parlamentswahl in Bulgarien endet" [Eighth election in five years: Early parliamentary election in Bulgaria comes to an end]. Deutschlandfunk (in German). 19 April 2026.
Als Favorit gilt das Mitte-Links-Bündnis Progressives Bulgarien des früheren Präsidenten Radew.
[The centre-left alliance “Progressive Bulgaria”, led by former President Radev, is considered the favourite.] -
"Ex-Bulgarian President Radev tipped to win general election with new coalition". Politico Europe. 2 March 2026.
Progressive Bulgaria brings together three center-left formations — the Political Movement Social Democrats, the Social Democratic Party and the Our People Movement.
-
Atanasova, Maria (3 March 2026). "Antoaneta Hristova: Rumen Radev's "Progressive Bulgaria" takes over the left niche". Fakti.bg.
- ^
-
Dunai, Marton. "Pro-Russia ex-president on course to win Bulgaria's elections". Financial Times. Budapest.
Radev's Progressive Bulgaria, a leftist political group, was predicted to win 37.5 per cent of the vote, according to an exit poll by local pollster AlphaResearch published immediately after polling stations closed on Sunday.
-
Powers, Chris; Fornusek, Martin (13 April 2026). "Hungary after Orban: Relief in Brussels, reality check on Ukraine". Kyiv Independent.
And on April 19, the new left-wing Progressive Bulgaria is leading the polls, and its leader, ex-President Rumen Radev, has previously opposed sanctions against Russia and military support for Ukraine.
-
Kot, Roman; Kovalenko, Vladyslava (19 April 2026). "Is Bulgaria getting its own 'Orbán'? What it means for Ukraine". RBC-Ukraine.
The main frontrunner is the newly created left-wing project of former president Rumen Radev, Progressive Bulgaria, currently supported by around 30% of voters.
-
Dunai, Marton. "Pro-Russia ex-president on course to win Bulgaria's elections". Financial Times. Budapest.
- ^ "Разкриха логото на проекта на Радев "Прогресивна България" (СНИМКА)". darik.bg (in Bulgarian).
- ^ a b c "Румен Радев ще се яви на изборите с "Прогресивна България"". dw.com (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 2026-03-02.
- ^ "Прогресивна България / Progresivna Bulgaria". Прогресивна България (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 2026-04-19.
- ^ "Progressive Bulgaria Party Founded in Veliko Tarnovo". www.bta.bg. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
- ^ "Формацията на Радев е Прогресивна България. Регистрира се с 3 партии — OFFNews". OFFNews (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 2026-03-02.
- ^ "Регистрираха коалицията на Румен Радев „Прогресивна България" в ЦИК". dariknews.bg (in Bulgarian). 2026-03-02. Retrieved 2026-03-02.
- ^ "Румен Радев се регистрира за изборите с коалиция „Прогресивна България"". bTV Новините (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 2026-03-02.
- ^ a b "ВМРО влизат в листите на партията на Румен Радев". News.bg. 11 March 2026.
- ^ a b "ВМРО ще има свои хора в листите на Румен Радев". Actualno. 11 March 2026.
- ^ "На изборите на 19 април ВМРО подкрепя проекта на президента Радев". VMRO. 28 February 2026.
- ^ a b
"Няма нито едно изказване на Радев, с което да се докаже, че той е проруски, пропутински". Club-Z (in Bulgarian). 24 January 2026.
Няма нито едно изказване на Радев, с което да се докаже, че той е проруски, пропутински. Той иска обоснована външна политика, която да стъпва на националния интерес. Румен Радев ясно каза, че тази война не може да се реши на бойното поле и ще се реши през преговори. Никога Радев не е поставял под съмнение европейската интеграция на България, НАТО. Той държи на това, че е български, а не натовски генерал, слага националните интереси са на преден план.
[Radev hasn't made a single statement that proves that he is pro-Russian, pro-Putin. He wants a grounded foreign policy based on national interests. Rumen Radev clearly said that this war cannot be won on the battlefield and must be solved through negotiations. Radev has never questioned Bulgaria's European integration or NATO. He insists on being a Bulgarian, not a NATO general, and puts national interests at the forefront.] - ^ "Progressive Bulgaria: Radev's Blueprint for Dismantling the Oligarchy". Novinite. 30 March 2026. Retrieved 2026-03-30.
- ^ Zhelev, Veselin (23 March 2026). "Радев е "боязлив популист", няма да рискува сблъсък с ЕС а ла Орбан". Club-Z (in Bulgarian).
- ^ [23][24]
- ^ Benakis, Theodoros (3 March 2026). "Bulgaria's former President Radev will run 19 April elections with his own coalition". European Interest.
- ^
"Радев отива на избори с "Прогресивна България", коалиция от бивши партньори на БСП, СДС и ПП". Svobodna Evropa (in Bulgarian). 2 March 2026.
Бившият президент се обявява срещу корупцията, Бойко Борисов и Делян Пеевски, но също така е споделял проруски позиции.
[The former president speaks out against corruption, Boyko Borisov and Delyan Peevski , but has also shared pro-Russian positions.] - ^
"Политолог: Възможна е поредица от избори, за да укрепне проектът на Радев". Mediapool (in Bulgarian). 4 March 2026.
Ако иска нещо друго, което стои зад фасадата на това, което заявява в момента, то може да се коалира с всички останали проруски партии в българския парламент. Знаем кои са. Зависи и в какви конфигурации ще попаднат.
[If it wants something else that is behind the facade of what it is currently stating, it can form a coalition with all the other pro-Russian parties in the Bulgarian parliament. We know who they are. It also depends on what configurations they will fall into.] - ^ "Bulgaria: Pro-Russian Radev set to win parliamentary vote". dw.com. Retrieved 2026-04-19.
- ^ [27][28][22][29]
- ^ Kot, Roman; Kovalenko, Vladyslava (19 April 2026). "Is Bulgaria getting its own 'Orbán'? What it means for Ukraine". RBC-Ukraine.
- ^ Majmurek, Jakub (17 April 2026). "W niedzielę wybory w Bułgarii. Rumen Radew idzie po władzę. "Kluczowe obietnice walki z korupcją"" [Elections in Bulgaria on Sunday. Rumen Radev is running for office. ‘Key pledges to tackle corruption’]. Newsweek (in Polish).