2022 election The parties which had formed the previous coalition—PP, BSPzB and DB—failed to gain a majority, only reaching 98 seats. Two pro-Russian and nationalist parties made gains, namely VAZ and the newly formed
Bulgarian Rise (BV). BV was led by former interim prime minister Yanev. GERB became the largest party with around 25% and 67 seats. ITN failed to reach the 4% threshold. It took three days for the Assembly to vote on a chairperson following the election. In the meantime, a dog called "Johnny" received joking endorsements from the public to become the chairman instead. Eventually,
Vezhdi Rashidov from GERB was approved as a compromise on 21 October. The first mandate went to GERB, and they proposed Nikolay Gabrovski. The parliament decided not to support Gabrovski on 14 December. During the government formation, a debate about the return of
paper ballots broke out, which were abolished due to concerns of
vote buying. GERB, DPS and BSP supported its return and were able to override a veto of President Radev against the changes of the electoral code. The second mandate went to the second largest party, PP, on 3 January 2023. The third and last mandate was given to BSP, which was also unable to form a government. This triggered snap elections, which were scheduled for 2 April 2023. However BSP then opened up the possibility of cooperation with GERB, which had the potential for a breakthrough.
Galab Donev was selected by Radev to lead
another interim government. PP negotiated with DB, alongside other minor organisations, to run on a joint list together for the 2023 election, a proposal all constituent parties of DB supported. They hoped to prioritise justice reform, joining the
Schengen Area and the Eurozone. The two parties were already working together in the upcoming local elections. On 10 February, DB announced they had come to an agreement and would be running on a joint list,
PP–DB. Going into the election, PP–DB hoped to form a minority government, while GERB supported forming a
grand coalition between them and PP–DB, which Borisov said would take time but could solve the political crisis. The election saw the GERB-led list retain its position in first, increasing its seat count to 69. PP–DB did worse than expected and were considered the losers of the night, dropping down to 64. VAZ rose above DPS, which stayed stable, and ITN narrowly re-entered the assembly. BV fell below the threshold. In terms of government negotiations, GERB stated that they would work with anyone, PP–DB broadly did not wish to join a government alongside GERB, and VAZ suggested that they would not join a coalition government. At the first sitting of the Assembly on 12 April, no speaker could be elected, with the parliamentarians only sitting for a few minutes. There was little progress toward government formation, though GERB and PP–DB pledged to meet and pass laws where the two groupings could see eye-to-eye. On 22 May, PP and GERB agreed to form a government with a rotational premiership.
Nikolai Denkov, PP's candidate would be the Prime Minister for the first 9 months of the government and
Mariya Gabriel, the GERB candidate, would serve as Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Affairs Minister. After 9 months, the two would switch positions. Petkov claimed the government was not a coalition, and that it was the best they could do, despite breaking their pre-election promise. Petkov also said he hoped the government could survive for at least 18 months, and confirmed he would not be a part of the cabinet. It was reported that DB would support the government, but with no ministers in government. There were suggestions that these recordings could impact the formation of a PP and GERB cooperation agreement, but Borisov said it would not make an impact. Denkov, the proposed Prime Minister, released the cabinet composition alongside the proposed Deputy Prime Minister, Gabriel, on 2 June. They announced that they were negotiating with DPS, in order to achieve the
supermajority of 160 MPs needed to enact constitutional reforms. DPS said they would not prevent the government's formation, but they were more vague regarding their explicit support. == Denkov government ==