site.btaTISP Party's Governance Consultations Continue with Rise Up! and BSP for Bulgaria
July 24 (BTA) - There Is Such a People (TISP), the party 
which controls the largest group in Bulgaria's newly elected 
National Assembly, on Saturday continued its consultations on 
the country's governance with other parliamentary forces. It 
held separate meetings with Rise Up.BG! Here We Come! and BSP 
for Bulgaria. The consultations opened on Friday with a session 
with Democratic Bulgaria.
TISP Finds Common Ground with Rise Up!
TISP Floor Leader Toshko Yordanov said after the meeting with 
Rise Up.BG! Here We Come! that the two groups share identical 
views on the judicial reform and social policies. "We may have 
differences about the details, but the direction is the same," 
Yordanov told journalists.
He described the meeting as very constructive and positive. "The
 talks will continue at the expert level," he added.
The one-hour meeting was the second in a series of talks between
 the election-winning TISP and other parliamentary forces after 
the July 11 early parliamentary elections and ahead of forming a
 new government. TISP's first session was with Democratic 
Bulgaria on Friday.
According to Yordanov, TISP has invited to the talks all other 
parliamentary groups except for GERB, the party which has 
dominated Bulgarian politics for more than a decade. "GERB is 
the worst evil to democracy," he argued.
At the beginning of Saturday's meeting, both TISP and Rise Up! 
spoke against the role of the Movement for Rights and Freedoms 
(MRF) as a power broker in Bulgarian politics. During the part 
of the meeting that was open to the media, Rise Up! Floor Leader
 Maya Manolova said they want to bar "the long arm" of the MRF 
and GERB from Bulgaria's governance. Yordanov expressed a 
similar desire. "This is where we start off, and then we can go 
on discussing other matters," he commented.
After the meeting, Manolova was asked by a journalist whether 
her group was assured that the red line concerning the MRF will 
not be crossed. She replied: "We will not support a cabinet in 
which the MRF's influence is discernible. Period. There would be
 nothing wholesome about either GERB or the MRF sharing in the 
next government or influencing it in any way."
Manolova said TISP assured them that support for the next 
government would be unacceptable unless Democratic Bulgaria and 
Rise Up! are involved. "That is to say, they will propose a 
cabinet with a programme and policies after they become 
convinced that they will receive our support and the support of 
Democratic Bulgaria."
Discussing the possibility to investigate earlier governments, 
Manolova thanked TISP for signing up to a parliamentary inquiry.
TISP and BSP: Similar Views, But Not Without Differences
After a separate meeting, TISP and BSP for Bulgaria concluded 
that they support the same policies in some areas but also have 
differences. The two parliamentary groups vowed to meet again.
BSP for Bulgaria Floor Leader Kornelia Ninova said the talks 
with TISP will be discussed by the National Council of the 
Bulgarian Socialist Party on Sunday, and if a mandate is 
granted, the consultations will continue.
Toshko Yordanov, the TISP Floor Leader, also said that the talks
 with BSP for Bulgaria will continue. Yordanov told another 
briefing: "That was our first meeting, at which we set forth our
 views about the most important things that need to be done in 
the coming months, let's say a year and a half. And they set 
forth their views."
Discussing the common ground between TISP and BSP for Bulgaria, 
Yordanov said: "We share things in common. The same can be said 
about quite a few parties, not just us and them. We also have 
differences in some respects, and in some cases we have the same
 direction but different highlights about which we may not reach
 agreement, but these are the sort of things that should be 
handled afterwards in the working groups in Parliament. The good
 news about the last couple of days is that we established a 
single direction to follow."
Ninova believes that the similarities of opinion between BSP for
 Bulgaria and TISP are more than their differences. "We remain 
opposed to the privatization of the Bulgarian Development Bank, 
the award of concessions for motorways. We also have some 
differences on pension adjustment, more specifically the 
timing," the Socialist leader said.
She pointed to the existence of many similar views of the two 
groups regarding the judicial reform, including the need to shut
 down the Specialized Criminal Court, the Specialized 
Prosecution Office and the Counter-corruption and Unlawfully 
Acquired Assets Forfeiture Commission, and to make the 
Prosecutor General accountable. "We share the view that a 
deep-going judicial reform requires amending the Constitution, 
which takes time." One point of disagreement is TISP's push to 
demonopolize the National Health Insurance Fund.
Yordanov said the BSP are a welfare-oriented party, while TISP 
are more practically-minded. "They favour increasing taxes, 
introducing a progressive tax, while we are opposed to 
increasing taxes, but we have tried to identify our common 
ground, because the only other option is elections," he said.
Commenting on the possibility to seek support from the MRF for 
the future government, Ninova said this is up to TISP because 
they hold the government mandate.
TISP and the MRF are to meet on Sunday. RI/VE
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