See related documentsElection observation report
| Doc. 14237
| 23 January 2017
Observation of the presidential election in Bulgaria (6 and 13 November 2016)
Author(s): Ad hoc Committee of the Bureau
Rapporteur : Mr Joseph O'REILLY,
Ireland, EPP/CD
1. Introduction
1. On 29 July 2016, Ms Tsetska
Tsacheva, President of the National Assembly of Bulgaria, invited
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe to observe the
presidential election in Bulgaria, scheduled for 6 November 2016.
2. The Bureau of the Parliamentary Assembly, at its meeting on
26 May 2016, had decided to observe this election (subject to receiving
an invitation) and had constituted an ad hoc committee for this
purpose composed of 11 members (EPP/CD: 3; SOC: 3; ALDE: 2; EC:
2; UEL: 1) and the co-rapporteurs of the Monitoring Committee. On
24 June 2016, it appointed Mr Luís Leite Ramos (Portugal, EPP/CD)
as its Chairperson. On 14 October 2016 it approved the revised list
of members of the ad hoc committee and appointed Mr Joseph O’Reilly
(Ireland, EPP/CD) as its Chairperson to replace Mr Leite Ramos,
who could not participate in the mission. The list of members appears
in Appendix 1.
3. In line with the co-operation agreement signed between the
Parliamentary Assembly and the European Commission for Democracy
through Law (Venice Commission) on 4 October 2004, a representative
of the Venice Commission was invited to join the ad hoc committee
as a legal adviser.
4. The ad hoc committee met in Sofia from 4 to 7 November 2016.
The programme of the ad hoc committee’s meetings is set out in Appendix
2. On election day, the Parliamentary Assembly delegation split into
six teams and observed the vote in Sofia and its surroundings, as
well as in the districts of Blagoevgrad, Plovdiv, Veliko Tarnovo,
Montana, Vratza and Pernik.
5. The following day, the ad hoc committee held a press conference
and issued a statement (Appendix 3).
2. Political background
6. The previous presidential election
was held in Bulgaria on 23 (first round) and 30 October 2011 (second round).
Mr Rosen Plevneliev won then with 52.6% of the votes. In May 2016,
he announced that he would not be running for re-election.
7. The 2016 presidential election was held alongside a referendum
on changes to the electoral system and political party funding.
A petition for the referendum was initiated by one of the most popular
TV show presenters in Bulgaria and managed to gather 673 481 signatures
in favour of holding it. A check by the general directorate of the
regional ministry established that 572 650 of the signatures were
valid, with the minimum threshold for the holding of a referendum
initiated by citizens being 400 000 valid signatures.
8. In May 2016, President Rosen Plevneliev referred to the Constitutional
Court three questions out of a total of six questions proposed for
the referendum. On 28 July 2016, the Constitutional Court of Bulgaria unanimously
rejected the three questions referred to it despite all questions
having been previously accepted by the parliament for a national
referendum to be held in autumn 2016. The three rejected questions
were about, first, whether to introduce online voting in elections
and referendums, second, whether to reduce the number of members
of parliament from 240 to 120, and third, on the election of the
heads of regional directorates of the Interior Ministry through
a majoritarian electoral system, requiring an absolute majority
at the end of two rounds.
9. The three questions that remained for the 6 November referendum
were about the introduction of a majoritarian system to elect members
of parliament, the introduction of compulsory voting (even though
the parliament had already legislated on this) and the reduction
of the State subsidies for political parties and coalitions to one
lev (about 50 euro cents) per valid vote.
10. The Constitutional Court rejected the question about reducing
the number of members of the National Assembly from 240 to 120 on
the grounds that deciding this was solely within the competence
of a Grand National Assembly
. The court held
that for decisions taken in the referendum to be implemented, the
matter must be in the competence of the body which decides on holding
the referendum. The National Assembly could not commit to holding
a referendum on issues which were in the jurisdiction of other authorities,
such as a Grand National Assembly.
11. The Court pointed out that it found it necessary “to once
again emphasise” that a national referendum is a powerful tool for
the direct exercise of State power by citizens, significantly different
from other forms of participation “and in no way is a kind of public
opinion poll”. This meant that the National Assembly should strictly
exercise the powers given to it by the Constitution and the law,
to prevent people being misled and taking part in the voting without
it being clear that the result of the referendum would not produce
the legal consequences being sought.
12. In his approach to the Constitutional Court, President Plevneliev
had said that the Constitution could not be circumvented by trying
to allow parliament, which would have to implement the decision
taken by referendum, to decide by a simple majority vote matters
that were under the jurisdiction of a Grand National Assembly.
13. According to a decision of the Central Election Commission,
voters would have to explicitly ask for the ballot paper for the
referendum. In other terms, it meant that members of polling stations
would not automatically deliver the ballot paper for the referendum
to the voters unless it was explicitly requested by the voter.
3. Legal
framework
14. The President and Vice-President
are elected on the same ticket by popular vote for a five-year term (eligible
for a second term).
15. The President appoints the Prime Minister candidate nominated
by the party holding the highest number of seats in the National
Assembly to form a government. Should the Prime Minister designate
fail to form a government within seven days, the President shall
entrust this task to a Prime Minister-designate nominated by the
second largest parliamentary group. Should the new Prime Minister-designate
also fail to form a government within seven days, the President
shall entrust the task to a Prime Minister-designate nominated by
one of the minor parliamentary groups. Should the consultations
prove successful, the President shall ask the National Assembly
to elect the Prime Minister-designate. In the absence of an agreement
on the formation of a government, the President shall appoint a
caretaker government, dissolve the National Assembly and schedule
new elections. In these instances, the President shall not dissolve
the National Assembly during the last three months of his term of
office.
16. The President is the Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the Armed
Forces of the Republic of Bulgaria. He can exercise extraordinary
powers in cases of emergency; he has the right to veto parliamentary
decisions, but only once for the same bill.
17. The main piece of legislation governing presidential elections
is the Election Code of 22 July 2016. In addition to the Constitution
of Bulgaria and the Election Code, other pieces of legislation are
relevant: the Direct Citizen Participation in State and Local Government
Act, the Political Parties Act, the Local Self-government and Local
Administration Act and the Administrative Violations and Sanctions
Act.
18. After the Ombudsman of Bulgaria challenged, on 17 October
2016, provisions of the Election Code on voting abroad before the
Constitutional Court, arguing that a restriction which sets a cap
of 35 Bulgarian polling stations per country violates the Constitution
by infringing on the rights of expatriates to vote, the government parties
(GERB, the Reformist Bloc and the Patriotic Front) reached a compromise
to amend the Election Code after an emergency meeting, removing
the cap on the number of polling stations outside Bulgaria within
the European Union. Consequently, the National Assembly adopted,
on 21 October, the relevant amendments to the Election Code. However,
this restriction remained valid for non-EU countries (which include
Turkey and the United States).
19. The National Assembly also debated the “None of the above
candidates” option on the ballot paper, but this voting option remained.
Under the current rules, the “None of the above” option is a valid
vote and is therefore part of the voters having voted; it is used
to measure the voter turnout but is not counted in the final results.
Some, including President Rosen Plevneliev, voiced concerns about
a method that may allow any of the candidates to get support from
“protesting voters” if their share is not taken into account in
the final result.
20. In May 2016, the National Assembly adopted a number of amendments
to the Election Code. These included the introduction of compulsory
voting, the transfer of most election-related responsibilities from
the Council of Ministers to the Central Election Commission and
new rules for the establishment of polling stations abroad.
21. On 14 October 2016, the Monitoring Committee of the Parliamentary
Assembly requested an opinion of the Venice Commission. This opinion
will be prepared jointly with the Office for Democratic Institutions
and Human Rights of the Organization for Security and Co-operation
in Europe (OSCE/ODIHR) and will mainly focus on the recent amendments
to the Election Code. The opinion will be issued at the Venice Commission’s plenary
session of 2017.
22. The President and the Vice-President of Bulgaria are elected
jointly through a nationwide majoritarian system for a five-year
term. More than half of registered voters must cast ballots for
the election to be valid. Any Bulgarian citizen entitled to vote
is eligible providing that he/she is at least 40 years of age and
has resided in the country for the five years preceding the election.
23. The President and the Vice-President are elected simultaneously
from national candidate lists registered by political parties and
coalitions or by nomination committees. They are elected on the
same ticket, on the same conditions and by the same procedure and
are eligible for only one re-election to the same office.
24. The Election Code provides for various voting methods, including
mobile voting (homebound voting), voting at special polling stations,
use of absentee voting certificates and voting abroad. The Election
Code also provides for both paper and machine voting. Machine voting
was conducted at 500 polling stations. In addition, an experimental
machine vote count was conducted in accordance with the rules defined
by the Central Election Commission.
4. Electoral
administration, voters lists and the registration of candidates
25. The presidential elections
are administered by a three-level structure of electoral management
bodies: the Central Election Commission (CEC), 31 constituency (district)
election commissions and around 12 000 section (precinct) election
commissions.
26. The CEC consists of 18 members, including a chairperson, deputy
chairpersons and a secretary, who are nominated by the parties and
coalitions represented in parliament, as well as of members nominated
by each of the parties and coalitions which have elected members
in the European Parliament, but which are not represented in the
Parliament of Bulgaria.
27. The chairperson, the deputy chairpersons and the secretary
of the CEC are elected by the National Assembly, whereas the rest
of the members are appointed by the President following proposals
by the political parties and coalitions in parliament.
28. A constituency election commission consists of a chairperson,
deputy chairpersons, secretary and members. The representatives
of any single party or coalition should not represent the majority
in the constituency election commission. The chairperson, the deputy
chairperson and the secretary may not be of one and the same party
or coalition. In constituencies of up to nine members of parliament,
the constituency election commission will be composed of 13 members.
In constituencies of 10 or more members of parliament, the constituency
election commission will be composed of 17 members.
29. The constituency election commissions or the municipal election
commissions appoint section election commissions for each voting
section within Bulgaria not later than 25 days in advance of polling
day.
30. The section election commission consists of a chairperson,
a deputy chairperson, a secretary and members. The representatives
of any single party or coalition should not represent the majority
in the section election commission. The chairperson, the deputy
chairperson and the secretary may not be of one and the same party
or coalition. The number of members of section election commissions,
including a chairperson, a deputy chairperson and a secretary, is,
for voting sections with up to 500 voters inclusive, up to seven members,
but not fewer than five; and for voting sections with more than
500 voters, up to nine members, but not fewer than five.
31. All Bulgarian citizens aged 18 years or over on election day
have the right to vote, except those serving a prison sentence,
regardless of the severity of the crime. The recent amendments to
the Election Code prescribe that a voter who has not voted during
two consecutive elections of the same type without a valid reason
is removed from the voters lists. Active registration is consequently
prescribed for those wishing to be reinstated in the lists.
32. Additionally, there is a new provision introduced by the recent
amendments, according to which “the voter [abroad] shall furthermore
present a declaration completed in a standard form to the effect
that he or she has not voted and will not vote elsewhere in the
same elections. The said declaration shall be attached to the electoral
roll and shall constitute an integral part thereof”.
33. If a voter is not registered in a voters list but is entitled
to vote, he or she has to justify this right by presenting to his/her
section election commission a declaration in a standard form to
the effect that the said voter has not voted and will not vote elsewhere.
34. The voters lists are compiled by the municipal administrations.
Each voter shall be entered on a single list and registered according
to his/her permanent address. A separate voters list shall be compiled
for each voting section.
35. Special voters lists are established for the purpose of voting
outside polling stations, i.e. in medical-treatment facilities,
specialised institutions, prisons and navigation vessels. There
are also specific voters lists established for voting abroad, based
on applications by Bulgarians living abroad and wishing to exercise
their voting right through diplomatic and consular missions.
36. The candidates for President and Vice-President may be proposed
for registration by a party, a coalition or a nomination committee.
Independent candidates are registered when the candidature thereof
is supported by at least 2 500 voters. According to the new amendments,
each voter may participate in only one list.
37. The CEC is responsible for registering candidates. Should
a registration be denied by the CEC, the decision can be challenged
before the Supreme Administrative Court.
38. The CEC is the main relevant (but not exclusive) authority
to examine complaints about irregularities affecting the electoral
process, including against decisions and actions of constituency
and section election commissions, including section election commissions
abroad. The CEC pronounces a decision on any such complaints within
24 hours of the complaint being submitted. On election day, the
CEC pronounces a decision within one hour after the arrival of any
such complaint and in any case before the closing of the poll. The Supreme
Administrative Court is the relevant body for appeals of CEC decisions,
including the decisions taken following election disputes appealed
before the CEC.
39. In addition, the constituency election commissions are competent
to deal with complaints about irregularities affecting the election
campaign and have to take a decision within 17 hours of the arrival
of any such complaints and with complaints against decisions and
actions of section election commissions within the same deadlines
as the CEC. The CEC is the appeal authority for election dispute
resolution before constituency election commissions.
40. Disputes relating to registration of candidates can be filed
before the Supreme Administrative Court.
41. Disputes relating to media during electoral campaigns can
be filed before the CEC for national broadcast providers or before
the constituency election commission of the territory where the
challenged medium is broadcasted. The CEC is the appeal authority
for election dispute resolution before constituency election commissions
relating to media during electoral campaigns. The decisions of the
CEC are appealable before the Supreme Administrative Court.
42. Citizens who are not included on the voters lists can appeal
such a decision or inaction before the Supreme Administrative Court.
43. Domestic observers, party agents and representatives of parties,
coalitions and nomination committees can also file complaints about
irregularities affecting the electoral process.
44. Nevertheless, voters are not authorised to file complaints
about irregularities which would have affected their rights during
the electoral process. As indicated in the 2014 Venice Commission-OSCE/ODIHR
opinion on the draft Election Code of Bulgaria, voters registered
in the constituency concerned should be entitled to contest the
election results.
45. A total of 24 candidates registered for the presidential election.
Three of them did not gather the required number of signatures,
therefore 21 candidates ran.
46. The main candidates (according to surveys) were Ms Tsetska
Tsacheva (Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria – GERB);
Mr Rumen Radev (Bulgarian Socialist Party – BSP); Mr Krasimir Karakachanov
(VMRO – Ataka block and Front for national survival); Mr Trajcho
Trajchev (Reformist Block – RF); Mr Ivailo Kalfin (ABV); Ms Tatyana
Doncheva (Movement 21) and Mr Plamen Oresharski (Turkish party Movement
for Rights and Freedoms).
5. Election
campaign and finance and media environment
47. The official election campaign
started 30 days before election day and was low-key. According to
the Election Code, it has to be conducted in the Bulgarian language
only.
48. Funding of political parties, coalitions and candidates is
based on public funds as well as on the financial resources of the
party or of the coalition, on financial resources of the candidates
and of contributions by natural persons.
49. Anonymous contributions, contributions by legal persons, contributions
from abroad (by natural persons as well as States, State-owned companies
and foreign non-profit organisations) and contributions from religious
institutions are banned.
50. The total amount of campaign funding for a presidential election
cannot exceed 2 million BGN (approximately €1 million) for a party,
a coalition and a nomination committee.
51. The National Audit Office has the authority to oversee political
party and campaign expenses.
52. Public service broadcasters are required to cover elections
in accordance with the principles of equitability and objectivity
and allocate free airtime to each contestant. The election coverage
by private broadcasters is largely unregulated.
53. Public funding for media advertising is provided to the parties,
coalitions and nomination committees that have registered a candidate.
54. A new provision among the recent amendments stipulates that
“it shall be prohibited to use the coat of arms or the flag of the
Republic of Bulgaria or of any foreign State, as well as any religious
signs or designs, in any campaign materials”. Another new provision
states that “it shall be prohibited to make political insinuations
in commercial advertising to the benefit or to the detriment of
any party, coalition or nomination committee or candidate”.
6. Polling
day
55. On election day, the Parliamentary
Assembly delegation split into six teams and observed the vote in Sofia
and its surroundings, as well as in the districts of Blagoevgrad,
Plovdiv, Veliko Tarnovo, Montana, Vratza and Pernik. In the polling
stations observed, the election day was assessed as generally calm.
56. On 8 November 2016, the final results were announced: Mr Rumen
Radev – 25.45%; Ms Tsetska Tsacheva – 21.97%; Mr Krasimir Karakachanov
– 14.57%; Mr Veselin Mareshki – 11.18%; Mr Plamen Oresharski – 6.63%;
Mr Traycho Traykov – 5.87%. The turnout was 56.28%.
57. On 13 November, a run-off was held between Mr Radev and Ms Tsacheva.
The results were as follows: Mr Radev: 59.37% (2 063 032 valid votes);
Ms Tsacheva 36.16% (1 256 485 valid votes); option “neither of them”
4.47% (155 411 valid votes). The turnout was 50.44%.
58. On 13 November, Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, leader of the
GERB party, who supported Ms Tsacheva, resigned.
7. Conclusions
59. The delegation concluded that
the elections were well administered technically and fundamental freedoms
were respected. The election administration worked in a professional,
scrupulous and transparent manner. The relatively high turnout can
be considered as the expression of the hope for long-lasting political stability
in the country.
60. The campaign was competitive and increased public confidence
in the electoral procedures was observed. However, the electoral
campaign was low-key and the media did not show much interest in
reporting on the elections. There was no public debate on substantial
issues among the main candidates.
61. The accuracy of the voters lists remains a concern. Accurate
voters lists are central to a credible democratic electoral process.
62. In those polling stations where machine voting was used as
an alternative to paper voting (the decision to use one or the other
system being left to the voters), it was observed that only a relatively
small number of voters used machine voting. The delegation felt
that in the future it would be useful to use one or the other system
in a polling station, as opposed to using both systems simultaneously.
63. The Venice Commission’s Code of good practice in electoral
matters and the Council of Europe’s standards do not recommend amendments
to the fundamental elements of the electoral law within one year before
the elections. Prior to the presidential election, the Bulgarian
National Assembly adopted on several occasions amendments to the
Election Code. The Assembly has requested the Venice Commission
to provide an opinion on these amendments and the Venice Commission
announced it would be preparing it jointly with the OSCE/ODIHR and
would issue it in March 2017.
64. The Parliamentary Assembly and the Venice Commission will
continue to work alongside the authorities of Bulgaria in the field
of elections with a view to continue progress.
Appendix 1 – Composition
of the ad hoc committee
(open)
Based on the proposals by the political groups
of the Assembly, the ad hoc committee was composed as follows:
Joseph O’REILLY, Ireland (EPP/CD), Chairperson
Group of the European
People’s Party (EPP/CD)
Socialist Group (SOC)
- Geneviève GOSSELIN-FLEURY,
France
- Predrag SEKULIĆ, Montenegro
European Conservatives
Group (EC)
Alliance of Liberals
and Democrats for Europe (ALDE)
- Anne MULDER, Netherlands
- Luis Alberto ORELLANA, Italy
Group of the Unified
European Left (UEL)
Co-rapporteurs of
the Monitoring Committee (ex officio)
Venice Commission
Secretariat
- Bogdan TORCATORIU, Administrator,
Election Observation and Interparliamentary Co-operation Division
- Danièle GASTL, Assistant, Election Observation and Interparliamentary
Co-operation Division
- Gaël MARTIN-MICALLEF, Administrator, Secretariat of the
Venice Commission
Appendix 2 – Programme
of the ad hoc committee (4-7 November 2016)
(open)
Friday 4 November
2016
09:30-11:00 Ad hoc committee meeting:
- welcome of members by
the Head of the delegation
- presentation of the legal framework and of recent developments
by Mr Eirik Holmøyvik, Professor of Law, substitute member of the
Venice Commission
- presentation of the local political situation – Assoc.
Prof. Dr Teodora Kaleynska, local expert
- presentation of the deployment plan and of logistical
issues, by the Secretariat
11:45-12:45 Meeting with the delegation of Bulgaria to the
PACE: Ms Dzhema Grozdanova, Mr Yanaki Stoilov, Mr Danail Kirilov
and Mr Hamid Hamid
14:30-17:30 Meetings with presidential candidates and/or
their representatives:
BSP: Mr Rumen Radev; Mr Iliana Iotova; Assoc. Prof. Dr Tatyana
Burudjieva; Ms Teodora Rumenova Ovcharova
Coalition Movement 21 – NMS2: Ms Tatyana Doncheva; Mr Mincho
Spasov
ABV – representing Mr Ivaylo Kalfin: M. Georgi Dimitrov,
Member of the Executive Bureau of ABV political party and International
Secretary; Ms Pavlina Popova, Head of the political cabinet of the
President of ABV; Mr Marin Kirov, Member of the Executive Bureau
of ABV
Reformist Block: Mr Traycho Traykov; Mr Subi Subev; Mr Ivan
Ivanov
Saturday 5 November
2016
10:00-11:00 Meeting with media representatives:
- Ms Maria Cheresheva,
Association of European Journalists
11:15-12:15 Meeting with representatives of NGOs:
- Association “Transparancy
International: Mr Каlin Savov, Ms Vanya Nusheva
- Institute for Development of Public Sphere: Ms Iva Dimitrova
- Civil Initiative for Free and Democratic Elections (ГИСДИ):
Ms Katya Mihaylova, Mr Kiril Mirchev
12:15-12:30 Meeting with interpreters and drivers
15:00-16:30 Meeting with Ms Ivilina Verginova Alexieva-Robinsson,
CEC Chairperson
Sunday 6 November
2016
All day: Observation of the vote (opening of
the polling stations, vote, closing of the polling stations,
counting, tabulation)
Monday 7 November
2016
09:00- 10:00 Ad hoc committee meeting (debriefing
and adoption of a statement)
11:00 Press conference
Appendix 3 – Press release
(open)
Bulgaria Presidential
election well administered, although accuracy of voters’ lists remains
a concern
Strasbourg, 07.11.2016 – An 8-member delegation of the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE)*, led by Mr Joseph O'Reilly
(Ireland, EPP/CD) and accompanied by representatives of the Venice Commission,
visited Bulgaria from 3 to 7 November 2016 in order to observe the
presidential election.
The delegation met with presidential candidates or their representatives,
with the Central Election Commission, with members of the Bulgarian
delegation to the PACE as well as with representatives of the media
and of civil society.
The delegation concluded that the election was technically
well administered and fundamental freedoms were respected. The election
administration worked in a professional, scrupulous and transparent
manner. The relatively high turnout can be considered as the expression
of the hope for a long-lasting political stability in the country.
The campaign was competitive and an increase of public confidence
in the electoral procedures was observed. However, the electoral
campaign was low-key and the media did not show much interest in
reporting on the election. There was no public debate on substantial
issues among the main candidates.
The accuracy of the voters’ lists remains a concern. Accurate
voters’ lists are central to a credible democratic electoral process.
The Venice Commission’s Code of good practice in electoral
matters and the Council of Europe’s standards do not recommend any
amendments to fundamental elements of the electoral law within one
year before the elections. Prior to this election, the Bulgarian
National Assembly adopted on several occasions amendments to the
Electoral Code. PACE has requested the Venice Commission to provide
an opinion on these amendments.
On election day, the PACE delegation split in 6 teams and
observed the vote in Sofia and its surroundings, as well as in the
districts of Blagoevgrad, Plovdiv, Veliko Tarnovo, Montana, Vratza
and Pernik. In the polling stations observed, the election day was
assessed as generally calm.
The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and the
Venice Commission will continue to work alongside the authorities
of Bulgaria in the field of elections with a view to continue progress.
The delegation will present its final report during the first PACE
part-session of 2017.
* Members of the delegation: Joseph O’reilly, Ireland (EPP/CD),
Head of the Delegation; Geneviève Gosselin-Fleury, France (SOC);
Predrag Sekulić, Montenegro (SOC); Anne Mulder, Netherlands (ALDE);
Luis Alberto Orellana, Italy (ALDE); Suat Önal, Turkey (EC); Ertuğrul
Kürkçü, Turkey (UEL); Frank Schwabe, Germany, Co-rapporteur of the Monitoring
Committee (ex officio).