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Bulgarian Agrarian National Union

The Bulgarian Agrarian National Union (BANU)[2] also translated to English as Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union (Bulgarian: Български земеделски народен съюз, Bŭlgarski Zemedelski Naroden Sayuz; BZNS) is a political party devoted to representing the causes of the Bulgarian peasantry. It was an agrarian movement and was most powerful between 1900 and 1923. Unlike the socialist movements of the early 20th century, it was devoted to questions concerning agriculture and farmers, rather than industry and factory workers. The BZNS, one of the first and most powerful of the agrarian parties in Eastern Europe, dominated Bulgarian politics during the beginning of the 20th century. It is also the only agrarian party in Europe that ever came to power with a majority government, rather than merely as part of a coalition. It is a founding member of the former International Agrarian Bureau.

Bulgarian Agrarian National Union
Български земеделски народен съюз
LeaderIliya Zyumbilev
Founded30 December 1899
HeadquartersSofia
NewspaperЗемеделско знаме
Paramilitary wingOrange Guard (1919–23)
IdeologyAgrarianism[1]
Historical:
Agrarian socialism
Political positionCentre
Historical:
Left-wing
ColoursOrange
National Assembly
0 / 240
European Parliament
0 / 17
Party flag
Website
www.bzns.bg

History edit

An Agrarian Union was first organized in Bulgaria in 1899. It was to be a professional organization open only to peasants and was at first not meant to become a political party. The Union initially won widespread peasant support by mobilizing peasants throughout Bulgaria to peaceful demonstrations against the government's unfair taxation policies. Throughout the process, the Union remained politically unaligned. However, at its third congress, motivated by upcoming elections for the Bulgarian National Assembly, the Union leaders, who were not peasants themselves but a group of teachers, voted to become a political party. Thus, in 1901, the Agrarian Union became the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union, Bulgaria's official peasant party. BZNS candidates subsequently ran for positions in local and national elections.

Over the next twenty years, the BZNS remained a part of Bulgarian politics, but it began to falter for lack of a concrete ideological base. Aleksandar Stamboliyski saved the party from that plight by first publishing a series of theoretical articles on the peasants’ role in the state and history, and finally taking control of the BZNS party. In 1909 he wrote the book Political Parties or Estatist Organizations, which laid the foundations for the ideology of the BZNS. Stamboliyski rose through the ranks of the BZNS and by 1918 had become the leader of the party. World War I left Bulgaria in a state of severe social and economic crisis, and after a series of worker and peasant strikes and uprisings between 1918 and 1920, the Bulgarian army and all old political parties were essentially discredited. In 1920, by a combination of major popular support and some coercive methods, Stamboliyski was able to create a BZNS controlled government. The party also formed a militia, the Orange Guard.

The chief rival of Stamboliyski's BZNS was the Bulgarian Communist Party (BKP). After World War I, the BZNS and the BKP were the two leading parties in Bulgarian politics. Though the BZNS initially beat the Communist Party for political power, its authority quickly began to wane because, according to the communists, the BZNS wavered in its support between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie. Although most of them were not rich, peasants still participated in an old bourgeois economic system, which was, from the Communist point of view, destined to fail.

Though the BKP was always opposed to certain BZNS policies, most other factions became dissatisfied with Stamboliyski and the BZNS because of growing corruption within the party, and an increasingly oppressive rule over the Bulgarian people. On 9 June 1923 a bloc of military factions staged a coup d'état and deposed the Stamboliyski regime. Though the Communists ultimately gained control of the Bulgarian government, the BZNS remained in existence (as a member of the Fatherland Front), and participated in agricultural policy in Bulgaria until the fall of communism in 1989.

Ideological foundations edit

Stamboliyski believed that over time, new groups which were more attuned to modern political and economic needs would replace old political parties. He detailed this view in the 1909 book Political Parties or Estatist Organizations. In this vein, the BZNS was supposed to be more than a political party. It was meant to retain its original function as a professional organization for peasants, and also involve itself in politics in order to guarantee the protection of the peasant classes. The BZNS was a populist party, and as such supported the rights of the individual peasant over those of the corporation or large-scale landowner.

Stamboliyski believed that mechanized agriculture would never replace the individual peasant, but also that peasant agriculture need not be backward or inefficient. Therefore, he stressed the importance of education in peasant communities. He also emphasized the need for social welfare, and believed that if the state could distribute arable land equally to each family and lower the tax burden on the peasantry, the condition of the Bulgarian peasantry would naturally improve.

Policies edit

After Stamboliyski came to power, the BZNS organized campaigns for redistribution of land and rural education. These campaigns were largely successful, and the BZNS enjoyed widespread support in the immediate post-war period.

In the international sphere, the BZNS was strictly anti-imperialist in its policies. Stamboliyski thought that the new groups which would supposedly replace the old political parties had the possibility to become international organizations. He hoped for and encouraged an agrarian alliance that would spread outside of Bulgaria to the entire Balkan region. He did not pursue territorial expansion, and generally neglected the army. These policies contributed to the dissatisfaction that led to the overthrow of Stamboliyski and the BZNS in 1923.

Members of National Assembly edit

1919–1923: 200 MPs
1944–1990: 99 and 100 MPs
1990–2009: from 30 to 7 MPs
since 2009: 1 MP

Wings edit

Chairmen since 1947 Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union edit

  • Georgi Trajkov – from 1947 to 1974
  • Petar Tanchev – from 1974 to 1989
  • Angel Dimitrov – from 1989 to 1990
  • Victor Valkov – from 1990 to 1991
  • Tsenko Bareva – from 1991 to 1992 (BZNS United)
  • Milan Drenchev – from 1990 to 1992 (BZNS "Nikola Petkov")
  • Anastasiya Mozer – from 1992 to 1996
  • Georgi Pinchev – from 1996 to 1997
  • Petko Iliev – from 1997 to 1999
  • Georgi Pinchev since 1999
  • Nikolay Nenchev from 2008 to 2022
  • Iliya Zyumbilev since 2022

Deputy chairmen (and functional areas) since 1947 edit

  • Kiril Klisurski – from 1948 to spring of 1950 ("Organization")
  • Nikolay Georgiev – from spring 1950 to spring 1958 ("Organization") and 1958–1987 ("Finance and administration")
  • Petar Tanchev – from spring 1958 to spring 1974 ("Organization")
  • Yanko Markov – from 1973 to spring 1989 ("Construction")
  • Georgi Andreev – from 1971 to spring 1976 ("International affairs" and "Organization"), spring 1976–1979 ("Agriculture")
  • Aleksi Ivanov – from spring 1976 to spring 1989 ("Organization") and from spring 1980–1989 ("Political affairs")
  • Angel Dimitrov – from 1974 to spring 1989 ("International affairs")
  • Dimitar Karamukov – from 1979 to spring 1984 ("Agriculture")
  • Pando Vanchev – from 1986 to spring 1989 ("Agriculture")
  • Viktor Valkov – from 1989 to spring 1990 ("International affairs" and "Organization")
  • Svetla Daskalova – from 1989 to spring 1990 ("Agriculture" and "Finance and administration")
  • Kostadin Yanchev – from 1990 to spring 1991 ("Organization")
  • Doncho Karakachanov – from 1993 to spring 1997 ("Organization" [BZNS "Aleksander Stamboliiski"])

List of ministers of Bulgaria from BZNS 1919–2001 edit

BZNS edit

  • Aleksandar Stamboliyski – Prime Minister of Bulgaria (1919–1923)
  • Rayko Daskalov – Minister of Agriculture (1919–1921)
  • Konstantin Muraviev – Prime Minister of Bulgaria (1944)
  • Ivan Beshkov – Minister of Agriculture (1943–1944)
  • Asen Pavlov – Minister of Agriculture (1944–1945)
  • Nikola Petkov – Minister (1944–1945)
  • Aleksandar Obbov – Minister of Agriculture and State Property (1945, 1946)
  • Mihail Genovski – Minister of Agriculture and State Property (1945–1946)
  • Georgi Traykov – Minister of Agriculture and Forestry (1947–1951) and Deputy and First President of Council of Ministers (1951–1964)
  • Kiril Klisurski – Minister of Mines (1948–1950)
  • Radi Naydenov – Minister of Justice (1947–1958)
  • Stoyan Tonchev – Minister of Architecture (1953–1958)
  • Petar Tanchev – Minister of Justice (1962–1966) and Deputy and First Deputy President of Council of Ministers (1966–1974)
  • Svetla Daskalova (daughter of Rayko Daskalov) – Minister of Justice (1966–1990)
  • Haralambi Traykov (the son of Georgi Traykov) – Minister of Information and Communications (1971–1973)
  • Yanko Markov – Minister of Forestry (1971–1986)
  • Georgi Andreev – Minister of Information and Communications (1973–1976)
  • Pando Vanchev – Minister of Communications (1976–1986)
  • Aleksi Ivanov – Minister of Agriculture and Forestry (1986–1988) and Deputy President of Council of Ministers (1986–1987)
  • Radoy Popivanov – Minister of Public Health and Social Welfare (1977–1988)
  • Georgi Menov – Minister of Agriculture and Forestry (1988–1990)
  • Mincho Peychev – Minister of Public Health and Social Welfare (1988–1990)
  • Viktor Valkov – Minister of Foreign Affairs (1990–1991) and Deputy President of Council of Ministers (1990–1991)

Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union "Aleksandar Stamboliyski" edit

  • Vasil Chichibaba – Minister of Agriculture and Food Industry (1995–1996)
  • Svetoslav Shivarov – Minister of Agriculture and Food Industry (1996) and Deputy President of Council of Ministers (1995–1997)

Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union - People's Union edit

Electoral results edit

Parliament edit

Election Votes % Seats +/-
1899 4,700 1.4%
0 / 169
 
1901 22,600 7.7%
12 / 164
  12
1902 24,710 6.1%
12 / 189
 
1903 ? ?%
0 / 169
  12
1908 68,308 14.6%
19 / 203
  19
1911 71,943 14.3%
4 / 213
  15
1913 113,761 21.2%
48 / 204
  44
1914 147,143 19.3%
47 / 245
  1
1919 176,281 27.3%
77 / 236
  30
1920 349,212 38.6%
110 / 229
  33
April 1923 569,139 53.8%
212 / 245
  102
November 1923 132,160 13.2%
19 / 247
  193
1927 285,758 24.8%
46 / 261
  27
1931[a] 626,553 48.4%
151 / 273
  105
1938 Banned
1939 Banned
1945 ? ?%
94 / 276
  57
1949 Part of the Fatherland Front
1953 Part of the Fatherland Front
1957 Part of the Fatherland Front
1962 Part of the Fatherland Front
1966 Part of the Fatherland Front
1971 Part of the Fatherland Front
1976 Part of the Fatherland Front
1981 Part of the Fatherland Front
1986 Part of the Fatherland Front
1990 368,929 6.02%
16 / 400
 
1991
0 / 240
  16
1994[b] 338,478 6.51%
18 / 240
  18
1997[c] 323,429 7.60%
19 / 240
  1
2001 15,504 0.34%
0 / 240
  19
2005 Did not contest
2009 Did not contest
2013 7,715 0.22%
0 / 240
 
2014[d] 291,806 8.89%
23 / 240
  23
2017[d] 107,407 3.06%
0 / 240
  23
Apr 2021[e] 75,926 2.34%
0 / 240
 
Jul 2021[f] 7,872 0.28%
0 / 240
 
Nov 2021[f] 11,240 0.42%
0 / 240
 
2022 Did not contest
2023 Did not contest
  1. ^ Results of the alliance Popular Bloc.
  2. ^ Results of the alliance People's Union.
  3. ^ Results of the alliance Union for National Salvation.
  4. ^ a b Results of the alliance Reformist Bloc.
  5. ^ Results of the alliance Patriotic Coalition.
  6. ^ a b Results of the alliance National Union of the Right.

References edit

  1. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2001). . Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived from the original on 4 February 2005. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  2. ^ Bulgarian Agrarian National Union, Britannica
  • Bell, John D. Peasants in Power: Alexander Stamboliski and the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union, 1899–1923. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1977.
  • Bozhkov, Lyuben and Stoyan Ninov. The Historical Path of the Bulgarian Agrarian Party. Sofia: BAP Publishing House, 1982.
  • Carlson, Allan C. Third Ways: How Bulgarian Greens, Swedish Housewives, and Beer-Swilling Englishmen Created Family-Centered Economies – and Why They Disappeared. ISI Books (2007)
  • Crampton, R. J. Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century—and After chapter 8. London: Routledge, 1997.
  • Dimitrov, A., Ravnosmetkata, 2001
  • Tishev, Dimiter. Friendship Born in Struggle and Labor: On the Joint Work of Communists and Agrarians in Bulgaria. Sofia: Sofia Press, 1976.
  • 33rd Congress of the Agrarian Union, Science and Art, 1977
  • 34th Congress of the Agrarian Union, Science and Art, 1981
  • 35th Congress of the Agrarian Union, Science and Art, 1987
  • Sarras Michalis, Agrarianism in the Balkans during the Interwar Period. Structure Formation and Social Evolution in Greece and Bulgaria, Unpublished Dissertation, University of Ioannina, Ioannina 2014 (In Greek)

External links edit

bulgarian, agrarian, national, union, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, june, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, t. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Bulgarian Agrarian National Union BANU 2 also translated to English as Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union Bulgarian Blgarski zemedelski naroden syuz Bŭlgarski Zemedelski Naroden Sayuz BZNS is a political party devoted to representing the causes of the Bulgarian peasantry It was an agrarian movement and was most powerful between 1900 and 1923 Unlike the socialist movements of the early 20th century it was devoted to questions concerning agriculture and farmers rather than industry and factory workers The BZNS one of the first and most powerful of the agrarian parties in Eastern Europe dominated Bulgarian politics during the beginning of the 20th century It is also the only agrarian party in Europe that ever came to power with a majority government rather than merely as part of a coalition It is a founding member of the former International Agrarian Bureau Bulgarian Agrarian National Union Blgarski zemedelski naroden syuzLeaderIliya ZyumbilevFounded30 December 1899HeadquartersSofiaNewspaperZemedelsko znameParamilitary wingOrange Guard 1919 23 IdeologyAgrarianism 1 Historical Agrarian socialismPolitical positionCentreHistorical Left wingColoursOrangeNational Assembly0 240European Parliament0 17Party flagWebsitewww wbr bzns wbr bgPolitics of BulgariaPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 History 2 Ideological foundations 3 Policies 4 Members of National Assembly 5 Wings 6 Chairmen since 1947 Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union 7 Deputy chairmen and functional areas since 1947 8 List of ministers of Bulgaria from BZNS 1919 2001 8 1 BZNS 8 2 Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union Aleksandar Stamboliyski 8 3 Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union People s Union 9 Electoral results 9 1 Parliament 10 References 11 External linksHistory editAn Agrarian Union was first organized in Bulgaria in 1899 It was to be a professional organization open only to peasants and was at first not meant to become a political party The Union initially won widespread peasant support by mobilizing peasants throughout Bulgaria to peaceful demonstrations against the government s unfair taxation policies Throughout the process the Union remained politically unaligned However at its third congress motivated by upcoming elections for the Bulgarian National Assembly the Union leaders who were not peasants themselves but a group of teachers voted to become a political party Thus in 1901 the Agrarian Union became the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union Bulgaria s official peasant party BZNS candidates subsequently ran for positions in local and national elections Over the next twenty years the BZNS remained a part of Bulgarian politics but it began to falter for lack of a concrete ideological base Aleksandar Stamboliyski saved the party from that plight by first publishing a series of theoretical articles on the peasants role in the state and history and finally taking control of the BZNS party In 1909 he wrote the book Political Parties or Estatist Organizations which laid the foundations for the ideology of the BZNS Stamboliyski rose through the ranks of the BZNS and by 1918 had become the leader of the party World War I left Bulgaria in a state of severe social and economic crisis and after a series of worker and peasant strikes and uprisings between 1918 and 1920 the Bulgarian army and all old political parties were essentially discredited In 1920 by a combination of major popular support and some coercive methods Stamboliyski was able to create a BZNS controlled government The party also formed a militia the Orange Guard The chief rival of Stamboliyski s BZNS was the Bulgarian Communist Party BKP After World War I the BZNS and the BKP were the two leading parties in Bulgarian politics Though the BZNS initially beat the Communist Party for political power its authority quickly began to wane because according to the communists the BZNS wavered in its support between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie Although most of them were not rich peasants still participated in an old bourgeois economic system which was from the Communist point of view destined to fail Though the BKP was always opposed to certain BZNS policies most other factions became dissatisfied with Stamboliyski and the BZNS because of growing corruption within the party and an increasingly oppressive rule over the Bulgarian people On 9 June 1923 a bloc of military factions staged a coup d etat and deposed the Stamboliyski regime Though the Communists ultimately gained control of the Bulgarian government the BZNS remained in existence as a member of the Fatherland Front and participated in agricultural policy in Bulgaria until the fall of communism in 1989 Ideological foundations editStamboliyski believed that over time new groups which were more attuned to modern political and economic needs would replace old political parties He detailed this view in the 1909 book Political Parties or Estatist Organizations In this vein the BZNS was supposed to be more than a political party It was meant to retain its original function as a professional organization for peasants and also involve itself in politics in order to guarantee the protection of the peasant classes The BZNS was a populist party and as such supported the rights of the individual peasant over those of the corporation or large scale landowner Stamboliyski believed that mechanized agriculture would never replace the individual peasant but also that peasant agriculture need not be backward or inefficient Therefore he stressed the importance of education in peasant communities He also emphasized the need for social welfare and believed that if the state could distribute arable land equally to each family and lower the tax burden on the peasantry the condition of the Bulgarian peasantry would naturally improve Policies editAfter Stamboliyski came to power the BZNS organized campaigns for redistribution of land and rural education These campaigns were largely successful and the BZNS enjoyed widespread support in the immediate post war period In the international sphere the BZNS was strictly anti imperialist in its policies Stamboliyski thought that the new groups which would supposedly replace the old political parties had the possibility to become international organizations He hoped for and encouraged an agrarian alliance that would spread outside of Bulgaria to the entire Balkan region He did not pursue territorial expansion and generally neglected the army These policies contributed to the dissatisfaction that led to the overthrow of Stamboliyski and the BZNS in 1923 Members of National Assembly edit1919 1923 200 MPs 1944 1990 99 and 100 MPs 1990 2009 from 30 to 7 MPs since 2009 1 MPWings editBulgarian Agrarian People s Union kaznionen officially called BZNS until 1991 when a group of parliamentarians from the BZNS Nikola Petkov united with the party under the name BZNS United Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union Nikola Petkov restored at the end of 1989 and co founder of the coalition Union of Democratic Forces A unifying congress of BZNS United and BZNS Nikola Petkov united the different agrarian wings under the name BZNS in November 1992 Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union United 1991 1992 see above Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union People s Union split in 1996 led by Anastasiya Mozer Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union Aleksandar Stamboliyski split in 1993 led by Svetoslav Stoyanov Shivarov Chairmen since 1947 Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union editGeorgi Trajkov from 1947 to 1974 Petar Tanchev from 1974 to 1989 Angel Dimitrov from 1989 to 1990 Victor Valkov from 1990 to 1991 Tsenko Bareva from 1991 to 1992 BZNS United Milan Drenchev from 1990 to 1992 BZNS Nikola Petkov Anastasiya Mozer from 1992 to 1996 Georgi Pinchev from 1996 to 1997 Petko Iliev from 1997 to 1999 Georgi Pinchev since 1999 Nikolay Nenchev from 2008 to 2022 Iliya Zyumbilev since 2022Deputy chairmen and functional areas since 1947 editKiril Klisurski from 1948 to spring of 1950 Organization Nikolay Georgiev from spring 1950 to spring 1958 Organization and 1958 1987 Finance and administration Petar Tanchev from spring 1958 to spring 1974 Organization Yanko Markov from 1973 to spring 1989 Construction Georgi Andreev from 1971 to spring 1976 International affairs and Organization spring 1976 1979 Agriculture Aleksi Ivanov from spring 1976 to spring 1989 Organization and from spring 1980 1989 Political affairs Angel Dimitrov from 1974 to spring 1989 International affairs Dimitar Karamukov from 1979 to spring 1984 Agriculture Pando Vanchev from 1986 to spring 1989 Agriculture Viktor Valkov from 1989 to spring 1990 International affairs and Organization Svetla Daskalova from 1989 to spring 1990 Agriculture and Finance and administration Kostadin Yanchev from 1990 to spring 1991 Organization Doncho Karakachanov from 1993 to spring 1997 Organization BZNS Aleksander Stamboliiski List of ministers of Bulgaria from BZNS 1919 2001 editBZNS edit Aleksandar Stamboliyski Prime Minister of Bulgaria 1919 1923 Rayko Daskalov Minister of Agriculture 1919 1921 Konstantin Muraviev Prime Minister of Bulgaria 1944 Ivan Beshkov Minister of Agriculture 1943 1944 Asen Pavlov Minister of Agriculture 1944 1945 Nikola Petkov Minister 1944 1945 Aleksandar Obbov Minister of Agriculture and State Property 1945 1946 Mihail Genovski Minister of Agriculture and State Property 1945 1946 Georgi Traykov Minister of Agriculture and Forestry 1947 1951 and Deputy and First President of Council of Ministers 1951 1964 Kiril Klisurski Minister of Mines 1948 1950 Radi Naydenov Minister of Justice 1947 1958 Stoyan Tonchev Minister of Architecture 1953 1958 Petar Tanchev Minister of Justice 1962 1966 and Deputy and First Deputy President of Council of Ministers 1966 1974 Svetla Daskalova daughter of Rayko Daskalov Minister of Justice 1966 1990 Haralambi Traykov the son of Georgi Traykov Minister of Information and Communications 1971 1973 Yanko Markov Minister of Forestry 1971 1986 Georgi Andreev Minister of Information and Communications 1973 1976 Pando Vanchev Minister of Communications 1976 1986 Aleksi Ivanov Minister of Agriculture and Forestry 1986 1988 and Deputy President of Council of Ministers 1986 1987 Radoy Popivanov Minister of Public Health and Social Welfare 1977 1988 Georgi Menov Minister of Agriculture and Forestry 1988 1990 Mincho Peychev Minister of Public Health and Social Welfare 1988 1990 Viktor Valkov Minister of Foreign Affairs 1990 1991 and Deputy President of Council of Ministers 1990 1991 Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union Aleksandar Stamboliyski edit Vasil Chichibaba Minister of Agriculture and Food Industry 1995 1996 Svetoslav Shivarov Minister of Agriculture and Food Industry 1996 and Deputy President of Council of Ministers 1995 1997 Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union People s Union edit Ventsislav Varbanov Minister of Agriculture and Forestry and Agrarian Reform 1997 2001 Electoral results editParliament edit Election Votes Seats 1899 4 700 1 4 0 169 nbsp 1901 22 600 7 7 12 164 nbsp 121902 24 710 6 1 12 189 nbsp 1903 0 169 nbsp 121908 68 308 14 6 19 203 nbsp 191911 71 943 14 3 4 213 nbsp 151913 113 761 21 2 48 204 nbsp 441914 147 143 19 3 47 245 nbsp 11919 176 281 27 3 77 236 nbsp 301920 349 212 38 6 110 229 nbsp 33April 1923 569 139 53 8 212 245 nbsp 102November 1923 132 160 13 2 19 247 nbsp 1931927 285 758 24 8 46 261 nbsp 271931 a 626 553 48 4 151 273 nbsp 1051938 Banned1939 Banned1945 94 276 nbsp 571949 Part of the Fatherland Front1953 Part of the Fatherland Front1957 Part of the Fatherland Front1962 Part of the Fatherland Front1966 Part of the Fatherland Front1971 Part of the Fatherland Front1976 Part of the Fatherland Front1981 Part of the Fatherland Front1986 Part of the Fatherland Front1990 368 929 6 02 16 400 nbsp 1991 0 240 nbsp 161994 b 338 478 6 51 18 240 nbsp 181997 c 323 429 7 60 19 240 nbsp 12001 15 504 0 34 0 240 nbsp 192005 Did not contest2009 Did not contest2013 7 715 0 22 0 240 nbsp 2014 d 291 806 8 89 23 240 nbsp 232017 d 107 407 3 06 0 240 nbsp 23Apr 2021 e 75 926 2 34 0 240 nbsp Jul 2021 f 7 872 0 28 0 240 nbsp Nov 2021 f 11 240 0 42 0 240 nbsp 2022 Did not contest2023 Did not contest Results of the alliance Popular Bloc Results of the alliance People s Union Results of the alliance Union for National Salvation a b Results of the alliance Reformist Bloc Results of the alliance Patriotic Coalition a b Results of the alliance National Union of the Right References edit Nordsieck Wolfram 2001 Bulgaria Parties and Elections in Europe Archived from the original on 4 February 2005 Retrieved 14 May 2019 Bulgarian Agrarian National Union Britannica Bell John D Peasants in Power Alexander Stamboliski and the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union 1899 1923 Princeton Princeton University Press 1977 Bozhkov Lyuben and Stoyan Ninov The Historical Path of the Bulgarian Agrarian Party Sofia BAP Publishing House 1982 Carlson Allan C Third Ways How Bulgarian Greens Swedish Housewives and Beer Swilling Englishmen Created Family Centered Economies and Why They Disappeared ISI Books 2007 Crampton R J Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century and After chapter 8 London Routledge 1997 Dimitrov A Ravnosmetkata 2001 Tishev Dimiter Friendship Born in Struggle and Labor On the Joint Work of Communists and Agrarians in Bulgaria Sofia Sofia Press 1976 33rd Congress of the Agrarian Union Science and Art 1977 34th Congress of the Agrarian Union Science and Art 1981 35th Congress of the Agrarian Union Science and Art 1987 Sarras Michalis Agrarianism in the Balkans during the Interwar Period Structure Formation and Social Evolution in Greece and Bulgaria Unpublished Dissertation University of Ioannina Ioannina 2014 In Greek External links editOfficial website Bulgarian Subject Files Political Parties Bulgarian Agrarian People s Union Blinken Open Society Archives Budapest Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bulgarian Agrarian National Union amp oldid 1195315348, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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