President of Bulgaria - Wikipedia The president of the Republic of Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Президент на Република България, romanised: Prezident na Republika Bălgariya) is the head of state of Bulgaria and the commander-in-chief of the Bulgarian Armed Forces The official residence of the president is the Boyana Residence in Sofia
President of the Republic of Bulgaria SPEECHES AND STATEMENTS Full text of the Speech by the President of the Republic of Bulgaria Rumen Radev, at the opening ceremony of the 10th Delphi Economic Forum 9th April 2025
Iliana Iotova Becomes Bulgaria’s President after Constitutional Court . . . Vice President Iliana Iotova has become Bulgaria’s new President after the Constitutional Court ruled on Thursday that the mandate of head of State Rumen Radev has been terminated early following his resignation Iotova is the first woman in Bulgaria’s history to assume the office of President
Bulgaria’s president says he is stepping down | AP News SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) — Bulgaria’s left-leaning president Rumen Radev announced on Monday that he is stepping down from the mostly ceremonial post Radev has indicated he may contest an upcoming election that’s widely expected after protests forced a center-right government to step down
Rumen Radev - Wikipedia Rumen Georgiev Radev[a] (born 18 June 1963) is a Bulgarian politician and former Bulgarian Air Force officer who served as the president of Bulgaria from 2017 until his resignation in 2026, the first to do so in Bulgaria's post-communist history
“Progressive Bulgaria” of former President Radev has become the . . . Such enthusiasm among Bulgarians is primarily related to the emergence of a new political force – “Progressive Bulgaria,” led by Rumen Radev, who recently left the presidential office The figure of General Radev, a former military pilot, and nominal head of state since 2017 until recently, has become iconic for Bulgaria
Rumen Radev Knows That In Election-Weary Bulgaria, the Less You Say the . . . Former Bulgaria President Rumen Radev – known for his soft line on Russia and a flair for populist statements – has launched his party, Progressive Bulgaria He looks set to win big in the April 19 snap elections but his campaign strategy has been a curious one: staying largely absent from the political discourse