Bulgaria's Cabinet cuts costs by sending no Christmas cards this year
Prime Minister Boiko Borissov cuts all cost on Christmas cards, calendars and receptions this year.
Sun, Nov 22 2009
About 22 results were found.
Prime Minister Boiko Borissov cuts all cost on Christmas cards, calendars and receptions this year.
Prime Minister Boiko Borissov held his first working meetings with French ambassador Etienne de Poncins, newly-appointed German ambassador Matthias Höpfner and ambassador John M. Ordway, chargé d’affaires of the US embassy.
Boiko Borissov brings half of his Cabinet with him on a mission to dazzle EU institutions
"I don't see how there can be a continuity of something that does not exist," Boiko Borissov says
It is easy being Prime Minister. You have a telephone with buttons and whichever minister you need, you can get on the phone at all times, Borissov says in a TV interview a month after taking office.
The performance of Prime Minister Boiko Borissov’s Government in moving against people and actions linked to the previous government is a classic illustration of the adage that new brooms sweep clean.
Cabinet to curtail SANS powers and resurrect former Interior Ministry organised crime-fighting unit
Borissov has seven days to name his cabinet; Parliament will vote on July 27 whether to approve it.
Right-wing parties asked to sign a memorandum of support - not a coalition agreement.
President Georgi Purvanov will designate Sofia mayor to form a cabinet on July 16
Management contracts handed to Bulgarian Energy Holding directors spark controversy even before new Cabinet is sworn in
Bulgaria’s most powerful political figure has long portrayed politics and politicians as something external to himself
I would not form a coalition government at any cost, Borissov says while criticising outgoing Cabinet for making last-minute diplomatic appointments.
The Cabinet approves four ambassadors and five general consuls in what could be its last session.
Support for prosecutors, building of highways and unfreezing EU funds on Borissov's agenda as he prepares to become prime minister.
Borissov will treat his injury at home for 30 days and will not require an operation, doctors said
Boiko Borissov wants to become Bulgaria's next prime minister and opts not to run for parliament
Michael Bar-Zohar was born in Bulgaria in 1938. After immigrating to Israel in 1948, he went on to become a lauded historian, politician and university lecturer.