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This account specializes in Balkan candor. Sarcasm. Russophobia. European confederalism. Atlanticism. Enter at your own risk. Слава Україні 🇺🇦

Apr 19, 6 tweets

A THREAD ON THE "BULGARIAN ORBAN" 🧵
Folks, Radev won't be the new Orban, please, read past the clickbait headlines! Here's why:

1) The math isn't mathing - he won't get a supermajority, he needs coalition partners.
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2) Bulgaria's external constraints are harder than Hungary's were when Orban took over. Bulgaria joined the eurozone this January, it is in Schengen, NATO, and depends massively on EU cohesion funds. Radev has said he would not use Sofia's veto power to block EU decisions. No one runs from where the money is, and it ain't in Moscow.

3) Radev is a party machine of ONE: his political project has no institutional depth. He's at the peak of his personal brand with zero machine underneath him. Bulgarian political history is littered with exactly this pattern: NDSV (42.7% in 2001 → gone), GERB as a personal vehicle that peaked and now survives on inertia, ITN (first political force in July 2021, ~1% now). Personalist projects in Bulgaria have a half-life of one to two electoral cycles.

4) Hungary 2010 vs Bulgaria 2026 are in opposite geopolitical moments.

In 2010, the EU was weak, absorbed by the eurozone crisis, with no tools to discipline a member state drifting authoritarian. The rule-of-law conditionality mechanism, Article 7, the frozen funds toolkit - none of it existed or was operational. Brussels basically watched Orban consolidate for a decade before doing anything.

By 2026, all of those tools exist and have been used. Hungary has billions in frozen EU funds. The "Orbán model" is empirically in decline at the exact moment someone is being accused of imitating it.

5) RUSSIA IS BROKE

Orban's pro-Russia tilt worked partly because Moscow could actually offer him juice. In 2026, Russia is draining its sovereign wealth fund to keep the war going, its gold reserves are being tapped, and it has nothing to hand out anymore. Being a Moscow-friendly leader in 2026 gets you rhetoric and domestic propaganda benefits, but not the material goodies that let Orbán deliver to his base. Radev can posture; he can't be paid. So any pro-Russian talk would be for domestic consumption only, it will not impact the EU.

Bottom line: expect a bumpy, coalition-dependent prime minister or the man behind one, running a government (assuming one is formed) that will rhetorically flirt with "balance" and "neutrality," pick domestic fights with pro-European parties, while keep cashing EU cheques.

Annoying, corrosive, bad for the anti-corruption agenda in the country - but structurally incapable of becoming a Bulgarian Orbán, because the majority, the institutional runway, the party machine, the external constraints, and the patron state are all wrong.

I get it that the lazy "new Orbán" headline sells clicks, but "journalists" and "analysts" should do better.

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