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Mina Kuteva: BSP will continue its course of change and regain trust

Krum Zarkov has set a new way of doing politics

Apr 26, 2026 08:06 57

Mina Kuteva: BSP will continue its course of change and regain trust  - 1

“Over the last 2 months, there has been a change in the BSP – in the way of making decisions, with the election of a new chairman with a new direction. We did not have enough political time to show and prove that the party is taking a new course. Our task from now on is to continue on this path, because it is the right one.” This was stated by Mina Kuteva, a member of the Executive Bureau of the BSP and Deputy Chairman of the Youth Union in the party, in the program “Offensive with Lyubo Ognyanov” on Nova News.

According to her, Krum Zarkov has set a new way of doing politics. “He introduced another political action and thinking, involving more real contact with citizens. Unfortunately, politics has become an elite concept, in which politicians wait for citizens to come to the halls and tell their problems, and this is not the case. Politics is done on the ground, Krum Zarkov started this initiative in our party extremely successfully and we intend to continue it”, Kuteva pointed out.

She described the almost unanimous vote of confidence that the BSP chairman received as logical. “He showed unity in the National Council of the party”, believes Mina Kuteva.

According to her, the failure of the left to enter the National Assembly is the result of the assessment that Bulgarian citizens have given to all parties that participated in the “Zhelyazkov” cabinet.

“It is important for us that in these elections, a large part of our voters for the first time in their lives see in the BSP a meaningful political formation to support. This is extremely important and reflects the change that is taking place in the party. And it shows that we can regain the lost trust and build on it”, Mina Kuteva was categorical.

According to her, the coming months and years will be key in the fight against the oligarchy in Bulgaria and for a fair judicial reform. “But it must have one main goal - for Bulgarian citizens to live better. "Currently, we have about 1.4 million Bulgarians at or below the poverty line. If this does not change, everything else becomes meaningless," Kuteva said.