Union Of Democratic Forces

This article is about the Union of Democratic Forces in Bulgaria. There is another article for the Union of Democratic Forces of Turkmenistan.
The Union of Democratic Forces (Bulgarian: Съюз на демократичните сили, Saiuz na demokratichnite sili) is a Bulgarian right-of-centre political party founded in December 1989 as a union of eleven political ogranizations in opposition to the Communist government. The following year, six more parties were incorporated and in February 1997 the Union was transformed into a single unified party by then-chairman and Prime Minister-to-be Ivan Kostov. The UDF is a member of the European People's Party.

A brief history

The dissident groups that formed under the faltering regime of Todor Zhivkov in the late 1980s were the basis for the Union and once Zhivkov fell a loose political confederation was envisioned, where constituent groups continued to work for their own cause, while the coordinating council included three members from each organization. Longtime dissident philosopher Zhelyu Zhelev, who would later become Bulgaria's President was elected chairman and Peter Beron, a well-known environmental scientist, was chosen as secretary. The UDF lost the 1990 elections to the Bulgarian Socialist Party (reformed Communist), but still participated in the joint cabinet of Dimitar Popov (December 1990 - November 1991), and later formed its own cabinet with Prime Minister Filip Dimitrov in November 1991, only to last a little over a year as the Parliament voted a motion of no confidence to Dimitrov in December 1992. The socialists, together with the Movement for Rights and Freedoms formed a coalition government headed by Prof. Luben Berov and then went on to win the 1995 elections. However, the BSP government failed to continue the necessary economic reforms and under increasing pressure from the public, including mass demonstrations throughout the country at the end of 1996, Prime Minister Jean Videnov resigned, clearing the way for new elections, this time won by the UDF with a crushing 55% vote. Party leader Ivan Kostov went on to form the new government and successfully carry on pressing economic reforms, eventually rewarded in December 1999 with an invitation to begin membership talks with the European Union. But painful reforms had their social cost and public discontent over increased unemployment and allegations of corruption led to the UDF's defeat in the June 2001 elections, won by the National Movement for Simeon II. The UDF is currently chaired by Nadezhda Mikhailova, former Foreign Minister in Kostov's cabinet. Meanwhile, the former Prime Minister and party leader left the UDF went on to form his own party - Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria.

List of chairmen

Chairmen of the Coordination Council Chairmen and Chairwomen of the unified party

External links

See also: List of political parties, Politics of Bulgaria

 

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