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Tsveta Rangelova, "Vazrazhdane": They are wiping out the traces of the CPC, we will lose 376 million euros under the PVU

The party is asked to limit the ethnic and controlled vote from Turkey

Снимка: Bulgaria ON AIR

The deputies finally closed the Anti-Corruption Commission.

"We were against it, as well as when a cheerful majority created this commission. We are against this urgent legislation to open or close bodies for the sake of certain people. Undoubtedly, this commission did not work the way the submitters wanted. The majority is concentrated around GERB-SDF, which is why they adopted their bill," said the deputy from "Vazrazhdane" Tsveta Rangelova on the show "Denyat ON AIR".

Why are they closing the KPK

According to her, the KPK acted more like a bat and the proposers probably want to sweep away the traces of the commission's activities.
"One of the most scandalous texts is the proposal that the data on archival cases go to the National Security Agency, and not to the Directorate General of Anti-Corruption, where it is logical for them to be located. As well as the scandalous proposal that the archival data be destroyed immediately", Rangelova told Bulgaria ON AIR.

"The main functions for which the KPK was part of the PVU will not be preserved. We will lose over 376 million euros for this reason, that's for sure," the MP from "Vazrazhdane" also announced.

The number of sections abroad is being reduced
Rangelova commented that the emphasis of the bill to limit sections in countries outside the EU is to limit the ethnic and controlled vote from Turkey.
"In Turkey, there is a trend of a dizzying increase in section election commissions. This does not mean that in other countries outside the EU - the USA, Canada, Great Britain... there will be no voting, as presented by the PP-DB. There remains the possibility of opening up to 20 election commissions," the guest explained.

Electoral changes before the early vote
"At the moment, the Electoral Code is not part of the weekly program of the National Assembly. I hope that common sense will be shown and that experiments will not be conducted days before the elections," Rangelova said.

According to her and her party members, machine voting is the least likely way for the elections to be manipulated.
No one knows whether scanning devices solve the problem, because the initiators of the changes have not managed to explain the electoral process with a machine, Rangelova pointed out.

"The time for introducing an entirely new type of machine voting is extremely short. Behind this was a clear statement that the aim was to switch to an entirely paper vote," the MP emphasized.

The emergence of Rumen Radev's party
Rangelova noted that "Vazrazhdane" is not worried about Radev's political project.

"We have no such concerns. At this point, there are no sufficiently clearly stated positions. Yesterday, Radev called for greater integration with the EU and the Eurozone, thereby defining his vision for foreign policy. This clearly contrasts with the fundamental will of our voters," she analyzed.