site.btaChanges in BSP's Leadership after a National Council Meeting
Changes in BSP's Leadership after a National Council Meeting
 
 Sofia, May 14 (BTA) - Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP) leader Kornelia  Ninova has four deputies in her party's Executive Bureau. In addition to  Stefan Danailov, they are Deniza Slateva, Vladimir Moskov and Kiril  Dobrev. 
 
 The National Council adopted on Sunday changes to BSP's Executive Bureau  on Ninova's proposal, the party said. The newly elected members are  Vladimir Moskov from Gotse Delchev, Atanaska Teneva from Plovdiv, and  Apostol Dimitrov from Varna. The following are keeping their positions  in BSP's Executive Bureau and 
 Parliamentary Group: Stefan Danailov, Valeri Zhablyanov, Dragomir  Stoynev and Kroum Zarkov. The following MPs were relieved from the  Executive Bureau: Krassimir Yankov, Ivan Chenchev, Stoyan Mirchev,  Alexander Simov and Vessela Lecheva. Kiril Dobrev has expressed  readiness to leave Parliament, but is keeping his place in BSP's  Executive Bureau, the party said.
 
 Ninova proposed the changes to the Executive Bureau's composition after  some of its members were elected as MPs, in order to avoid concentrating  all positions in the hands of the same people. 
 
 In just around a month after the elections, some 2.5 million Bulgarians  found themselves misled by the election campaign promises and  post-election actions of GERB and the United Patriots, said Ninova after  her party's National Council. 
 
 Ninova listed among the unfulfilled promises the United Patriots'  intentions to raise the minimum monthly pension to 300 leva. It is  illogical that the judicial reform was patched to the Foreign Ministry,  she said, assuming that the incumbents see the reform merely as public  relations for in front of their foreign partners, and not as an effort  aimed at justice for the Bulgarian citizens. GERB and the United  Patriots also backed away from their election campaign promise that a  police officer will be present in every settlement, Ninova went on to  say.
 
 Commenting the bill submitted by GERB to amend the Election Code and  introduce a majoritarian voting system, Ninova said that GERB are  submitting it because they very well know it won't pass, while the  Patriots are not supporting it, because if they do they will lose power.  The Socialist leader reaffirmed her party's position in favour of a  mixed system with elements of proportional and majoritarian  representation.
 
 Ninova accused the incumbents in nominating an EU commissioner without  informing the National Assembly, with which they showed that Parliament  does not matter in the Parliamentary Republic of Bulgaria. 
 
 According to BSP, the caretaker government was clearly Right-centrist  and failed to address the severe democratic deficits, observed in the  past few elections, she said.
 
 The check conducted by Ognyan Gerdjikov's caretaker cabinet on the work  of Borissov's previous government focused on the ministries headed by  the Reformist Bloc, which allowed to transfer the responsibility for the  shortcomings of Borissov's second cabinet to the disintegrating Bloc. 
 
 BSP's National Council adopted the party's budget until this year's end.  For the first time a fund is established for political initiatives, the  party said in a press release.
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