If the governing configuration will change for some reason, it will not be because of "Veličie" entering the parliament, but because of the problems that have already been seen in the ruling coalition over the past week.
This was told to the Bulgarian National Radio by political analyst Dimitar Ganev from "Trend" and commented that Boyko Borisov has one strong argument against the other participants in the parliament, and that is that "a convergence report is currently being prepared, which will be ready in June":
"Even if the majority collapses, this cabinet has enough argument within the parliament to tell the others to wait until the convergence report is received and, if it is positive, for the country to enter the eurozone from January 1, 2026. This government has still accomplished some task. ... I do not think that the MRF-DPS will leave the coalition, at least not soon. Probably some agreement will be reached for their participation in the second echelon of power. ... Even if they do leave, at least that's what Borisov said on Friday, it will not necessarily lead to new elections. There will be internal tension, ad hoc support will be sought from the PP-DB or the MRF-NN".
In the words of the political scientist, a change in the composition of the National Assembly after the Constitutional Court's decision will completely destroy confidence in the elections.
"Trust in elections in the last few years has reached an absolute low, imagine if a party enters parliament after a recount, how will it explain to voters that they need to go vote, because every vote matters. Against the backdrop of the lowest trust in the electoral process since the changes, imagine what it would be like to inject a new dose of distrust. This will automatically lead to additional demotivation of the already small remaining electorate that goes and exercises its right to vote. ... The biggest consequence is the generation of increasing distrust in the electoral process. ... If "Majesty" enters, the ruling majority may be on the verge of 121 deputies. And how is it governed like this? For each vote, no one will have the right to travel, be sick, be absent for any reason. It is very difficult to govern like this".