The good news is that the general election on 5 October 2014 did not, as some had feared, enthrone a populist strongman in the mould of Hungary's Viktor Orbán, Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, or Serbia’s Aleksandar Vučić. The centre-right GERB (“Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria”) headed by Boyko Borisov, a former bodyguard and police chief known for his macho persona and folksy ways, scored a victory, sweeping about one-third of the votes cast and humiliating its principal rival, the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP), which trailed far behind with a paltry 15.4%. But proportional representation soured the feat: GERB saw its caucus shrink from 97 to 84 members of parliament. As a result Borisov has no choice but to share power with others in any new cabinet. The bad news is that Bulgaria got a fragmented legislature, which bodes ill for the government that will follow, whatever its composition.
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The Propaganda System - Noam Chomsky excerpted from the book Stenographers to Power - 0 views
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Executive Summary:"Public Opinion and Democratic Responsiveness: Who Gets What They Wan... - 0 views
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Marcia G. Yerman: Race, Gender and the Media in the 2008 Elections - 0 views
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