#BREAKING Iranian delegation to attend 2nd round of talks with US despite latest Strait of Hormuz hostilities, 2 Pakistani sources familiar with mediation process tell AnadoluWorldEuropeProgressive Bulgaria heading for election victory with 45.3%, parallel count showsWe Continue the Change-Democratic Bulgaria and Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria-Union of Democratic Forces trail far behind, according to polling agencyBeyza Binnur Donmez20 April 2026•Update: 20 April 2026GENEVA

    The Progressive Bulgaria coalition led by former President Rumen Radev was projected to win Bulgaria’s early parliamentary elections Sunday with 45.3% of the vote, according to data from a 95% sample of the parallel vote count by a polling agency presented on Nova TV.

    The We Continue the Change-Democratic Bulgaria coalition was in second place with 12.2%, narrowly ahead of the Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria-Union of Democratic Forces coalition with 12.1%, BTA reported.

    The Revival party was projected to win 4.2%, slightly above the threshold required to enter parliament.

    Under the electoral system, parties must secure at least 121 seats in the 240-member parliament to form a government.

    According to the research center Trend, Progressive Bulgaria is projected to win 134 seats, followed by Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria-Union of Democratic Forces with 38 and We Continue the Change-Democratic Bulgaria with 37.

    Movement for Rights and Freedoms-New Beginning is projected to take 19 seats, while Revival is seen winning 12.

    According to the Central Election Commission, over 6.5 million people were eligible to vote in Sunday’s election, and as of 4 pm local time (1300GMT), voter turnout nationwide stood at 34.63%.

    Since 2021, the Balkan country of roughly 6.5 million people has struggled with fragmented parliaments, failed coalition negotiations and deep political divisions, resulting in short-lived governments and repeated caretaker administrations appointed by the presidency.