1881 Bulgarian Constitutional Assembly election

Constitutional Assembly elections were held in Bulgaria in June 1881. The body known as the Grand National Assembly (Bulgaria: Велико Народно събрание - Veliko Narodno Subranie) was convened for a second time in Svishtov in order to consider the amendments to the constitution proposed by prince Alexander I of Battenberg. The proposed amendments were an echo from the Conservative's requests during the first constitutional assembly elections back in 1879.[1] The amendments proposed included restricting civil liberties, reducing the size of the National Assembly, making the franchise indirect and introducing a state council. These amendments would, in effect, suspend the constitution and turn Bulgaria into an authoritarian dictatorship.[1]

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Bulgaria

Campaign

At first the Liberal Party was not perturbed by the proposed amendments as they believed the Bulgarian people were opposed to them and stood behind the Liberal Party. Believing this would be reflected in the election results, the Liberal Party was confident it would dominate the new assembly. This confidence evaporated when Russia decided to back the prince during the election. Russian soldiers were available at the polls to "help illiterates" and to "preserve order", though they placed little restraint on pro-Battenburgist thugs who congregated around polling stations.[1]

Results

Having "practiced all the latest modes of bulldozing known to the enlightened citizens", the pro-Battenberg conservatives were able to secure the majority they wanted.[2] Only two electoral districts returned liberal deputies and not all of them reached the assembly.[1]

Aftermath

On July 1[3] the GNA convened in Svishtov. The overwhelming conservative majority supported the constitutional amendments, taking less than two hours to pass all of them. The Prince Alexander had in effect carried out a coup d'état.[1] Following the coup, many infuriated liberals left Bulgaria. Battenberg's regime was weak from the get-go, however, as the real power was being absorbed by the two Russian generals dispatched from Saint-Petersburg, Leonid Sobolev and Alexander Kaulbars. The regime eventually collapsed and the constitution was restored on 6 September 1883.[4]

gollark: Why have them build a wall when they could just use bows?
gollark: You never know until you know.
gollark: Manufacturing silicon stuff is very hard.
gollark: That's actually *probably* true realistically?
gollark: The other bad part, in my opinion, is that it's expensive to just plonk down a computer to control some small system.

References

  1. Crampton, R.J. (2005). A Concise History of Bulgaria. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 90–91.
  2. "THE BULGARIAN ELECTIONS". Sacramento Daily Union. July 1, 1881. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
  3. "Хронология на Народното събрание". Народно събрание на Република България. Народното събрание на Република България. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  4. "Brief history". National Assembly of the Republic of Bulgaria. National Assembly of the Republic of Bulgaria. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.