The obvious conclusion is that the elections were not held well and we have a dysfunctional democracy. This was said in "Lice v lice" on bTV by Anton Kutev in connection with the decision of the Constitutional Court that 16 deputies were elected illegally and the "Majesty" party enters the parliament, quoted by novini.bg.
When you have a dysfunctional democracy in a European country, it means that the entire society is breaking down. If we want to live civilized, we cannot continue like this. This topic should have been resolved at the CEC level, and before that at the level of the caretaker government. The caretaker government can make the elections considered fair and honest, and the last ones were not, said Kutev.
Even some of the ruling parties do not agree with the way the elections were held, which means that we have a serious problem with democracy. The big question from now on is whether we will hold the elections this way, because if so, we obviously do not live in a democracy, he added.
Whether voting is done with machines or with paper, these are voting technologies and the evil genius can find a way to bribe both systems. To a large extent, machine voting can be fairer, but there is a way to manipulate it. It turns out that the entire system is so corrupt that it must be changed. The Electoral Code must be opened, meaningful changes must be made, machine voting must be returned and people involved in the conduct of the elections must be prepared, Anton Kutev pointed out.
Organized criminal groups are engaged in vote buying. On top of these organized criminal groups are people who sit in the front row of the parliament. All institutions must participate in cleaning up this phenomenon. If we cannot cope, the entire democracy will collapse. If the issue cannot be resolved legally, it will be resolved illegally. Violence may result, because the mockery of civil order cannot continue forever. We must demand it from our politicians every day and allow the authorities in Bulgaria to continue in a similar way. Citizens must find a way to react, Kutev also said.