Monday, April 20, 2026
Fascist Move of the Day
Bulgaria gets tired of coalition chaos and hands the wheel to the one serious man in the room. Europe has seen this film before.
Source: BBC News, April 20 2026
Historical Parallel
Interwar Europe repeatedly turned parliamentary exhaustion into an argument for concentration of power. Admiral Miklós Horthy in Hungary, King Alexander in Yugoslavia, and a whole gallery of authoritarian prime ministers benefited from the same mood: parties are squabbling, coalitions are weak, procedure is embarrassing, what the nation needs is one disciplined figure above the mess.
That is how democratic fatigue becomes permission for illiberal rule. The strongman does not have to arrive in jackboots. He can arrive as the competent adult who promises to end the embarrassment, steady the country, and make politics feel serious again.
"People rejected the self-satisfaction and arrogance of old parties and did not fall prey to lies and manipulation."
— Rumen Radev, in his victory speech, as reported by BBC NewsSources: Wikipedia: Miklós Horthy · Wikipedia: 6 January Dictatorship
The Full Dispatch
Rumen Radev's new Progressive Bulgaria movement has won the Bulgarian election decisively, after five years of fractured coalitions, repeated elections, and public exhaustion with parliamentary drift. With 87% of the vote counted, his party secured a working majority on its own. Bulgaria did not abolish democracy. It simply reached that familiar democratic mood where voters begin to view pluralism as a humiliation and consolidation as relief.
Radev is not presenting himself as an open autocrat. That is the point. He is a former air force commander promising seriousness, order, anti-corruption, and stability after years of weak governments falling apart. He is skeptical of sanctions on Russia, opposed to direct military support for Ukraine, and eager to sound pragmatic rather than ideological. This is how the contemporary European strongman pitch works.
The historical pattern is older than fascism proper but central to how fascists and fellow travelers rose. Parliamentary disorder becomes the evidence that parliament itself is the problem. Coalition bargaining gets recast as decadence. The "one serious man" becomes a national necessity. Sometimes he keeps elections, opposition papers, and democratic language. What changes first is the public appetite for being governed by one figure who claims to stand above politics while quietly concentrating its powers in himself.
Bulgaria is not suddenly a dictatorship because Radev won an election. But this is how backsliding usually looks when it first becomes electorally fashionable. Not tanks in the square. Not a manifesto announcing the end of liberty. Just a tired electorate, a discredited political class, and a candidate offering to make the whole irritating business of democratic bargaining go away.
The Playbook
Let coalition politics become drift → Make exhaustion feel like crisis → Offer one serious man as the cure → Rebrand concentration of power as competence → Keep democracy's forms while hollowing out its habits