Bulgaria's prime minister resigns as planned, part of a power-sharing agreement
Bulgarian lawmakers have unanimously approved the resignation of Prime Minister Nikolay Denkov, which he submitted as part of a power-sharing agreement between the two main political parties in the coalition government

Bulgarian lawmakers on Wednesday unanimously approved the resignation of Prime Minister Nikolay Denkov and his government, part of a power-sharing agreement by the two main political parties after elections last year.
The center-right GERB party which won last Aprilās general election and the runner-up, the reformist coalition led by āWe Continue the Changeā, agreed that each would hold the top job for nine months at a time.
Denkov, of the reformist coalition, is expected to be replaced by GERBās Maria Gabriel, a former European Commissioner, who previously served as deputy head of government and foreign minister.
Denkov, a chemistry professor and former education minister, will take Gabriel's place as deputy prime minister.
The two parties agreed to share power after elections last year in a bid to end a two-and-a-half-year-long political crisis, restore stability and spur economic development in the poorest member country of the European Union.
Addressing lawmakers ahead of the vote, Denkov confirmed that the outgoing government would continue to work until a new one is formed, and called for negotiations to begin immediately.
āDespite this environment of misinformation, sabotage, attacks and provocations, we are ready to move forward on the implementation of priorities set in our management program,ā Denkov said.
Denkov also confirmed the continuing support of his country for Ukraineās struggle against Moscowās aggression saying that it āreflects the national interest.ā He also listed the steps made to increase Bulgariaās defense capabilities.
Following last yearās election, GERB has 69 seats in the 240-seat parliament, while the reformist bloc has 63 seats.