The Republic of Bulgaria was restored in January 1990, following amendments to the communist-inspired
constitution, which put an end to the single-party rule of the Bulgarian Communist Party, and the
conclusion of the round table agreement between the communist government and representatives of the
democratic opposition. The new Bulgarian Constitution was adopted by the Grand National Assembly in
July 1991. It marked the return to multi-party democracy.
Since the beginning of democratic transformation in Bulgaria, four general parliamentary elections have
been held, including the elections to what was then called the Grand National Assembly of June 1990, and
elections to the national assembly in October 1991, December 1994 and, most recently, April 1997. The
next parliamentary elections are scheduled for spring 2001. Presidential elections were held in
January 1992 and November 1996. The next elections for the presidency will be held in autumn 2001.
Democratic local government elections took place in October 1991 and in November 1995. The next round
of local elections will take place in the autumn of 1999.
Bulgaria
Working paper
Sigma Public Management Profiles
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
Related publications
-
21 November 2024
-
8 October 2024