List of Bulgarian constituencies explained

Bulgaria is divided into 31 multi-member constituencies for the purposes of elections to the National Assembly.

Background

Bulgaria is divided into 28 provinces. Most of these correspond exactly to the constituencies, but Sofia City Province is divided in 3 and Plovdiv Province is divided in 2.[1] Plovdiv Province is divided between the 16th MMC (consisting of the City of Plovdiv) and the 17th MMC (consisting of the rest of the province). Sofia City Province (not to be confused with Sofia Province) is divided between the 23rd (southern Sofia), 24th (central and eastern Sofia), and 25th (western Sofia) MMCs.

In addition to their names, constituencies are numbered from 1 to 31 according to their order in the Cyrillic alphabet. There are a total of 240 seats in the National Assembly, and each constituency elects between 4 (the guaranteed minimum number of seats in a constituency) and 16 members of parliament.

List of constituencies

Seat allocation by constituency

Below is the numbers of MPs allocated to each constituency by election year. The number of MPs in 2009 only adds up to 209 because of the electoral system experiment of that year (see further below).

MMCConstituencySeats
20052009
201320142017[2]
1 10 9 11 11 11
2 13 11 14 14 14
3 14 12 15 15 15
4 9 8 8 8 8
5 4 3 4 4 4
6 7 6 6 6 6
7 4 4 4 4 4
8 7 6 6 6 6
9 5 4 5 5 5
10 5 4 4 4 4
11 5 4 5 5 5
12 6 5 5 5 5
13 9 8 9 9 9
14 5 4 4 4 4
15 10 9 9 9 9
16 10 9 11 11 11
17 11 10 11 11 11
18 5 4 4 4 4
19 8 7 8 8 8
20 4 4 4 4 4
21 7 6 6 6 6
22 4 4 4 4 4
23 13 11 16 16 16
24 11 10 12 12 12
25 12 10 14 14 14
26 8 7 8 8 8
27 11 10 11 11 11
28 4 4 4 4 4
29 8 7 8 8 8
30 6 5 6 6 6
31 5 4 4 4 4
Total 240 209* 240 240 240

2009 experiment

See main article: 2009 Bulgarian parliamentary election.

As an experiment, the 2009 election was conducted with a different electoral system than earlier elections. 31 out of the 240 MPs were elected through first-past-the-post voting, while the remaining 209 were elected through party-list proportional representation using the largest remainder method. This mixed electoral system was rejected for use in further elections, and the old system was returned in the next election in 2013.

The following 31 members of the National Assembly were elected through first-past-the-post in 2009:

MMCMemberParty
BlagoevgradLyuben Petrov TatarskiGERB
BurgasBozhidar Dimitrov StoyanovGERB
VarnaKrasimir Petrov PetrovGERB
Veliko TarnovoTsvetan Genchev TsvetanovGERB
VidinLyubomila Stanislavova StanislavovaGERB
VratsaNikolay Goranov KotsevGERB
GabrovoGalina Dimitrova BankovskaGERB
DobrichRumen Ivanov IvanovGERB
KardzhaliAhmed Demir DoganDPS
KyustendilValentin Tonchev MikevGERB
LovechAnatoliy Velikov JordanovGERB
MontanaPlamen Georgiev TsekovGERB
PazardzhikIvan Dimitrov IvanovGERB
PernikIrena Lyubenova SokolovaGERB
PlevenTsetska Tsacheva DangovskaGERB
Plovdiv-cityMenda Kirilova StoyanovaGERB
Plovdiv-provinceDimitar Nikolov LazarovGERB
RazgradHasan Ahmed AdemovDPS
RusePlamen Dulchev NunevGERB
SilistraMithat Mehmed TabakovDPS
SlivenDesislava Zhekova TanevaGERB
SmolyanDaniela Anastasova Daritkova-ProdanovaGERB
Sofia-23Boris Krumov GrozdanovGERB
Sofia-24Monika Hans PanayotovaGERB
Sofia-25Krasimir Lyubomirov VelchevGERB
Sofia-provinceEmil Delchev DimitrovGERB
Stara ZagoraIvan Dechkov KolevGERB
TargovishteKasim Ismail DalDPS
HaskovoDelyan Aleksandrov DobrevGERB
ShumenGeorgi Velkov KolevDPS
YambolAnastas Vasilev AnastasovGERB

See also

Sources

  1. Web site: Election Resources on the Internet: Elections to the Bulgarian National Assembly.
  2. https://www.cik.bg/bg/decisions/4149/2017-01-27 Seat allocation by constituency in 2017