The request is notable because EU member states do not often publicly seek this kind of support before a national election. According to the reported correspondence, Bulgarian officials asked the European External Action Service (EEAS) to identify and analyse foreign interference campaigns designed to manipulate public opinion through social media platforms and propaganda websites.
As reported by Politico, Sofia asked for action under the Digital Services Act, seeking coordination with major online platforms, such as Meta, Google, and TikTok, to detect and disrupt disinformation campaigns in real time. The European Commission has already confirmed that the process has started.
Read also Insight News research Russia’s Pre-Election Playbook in Bulgaria: Five Narratives, One Goal.
Why the Bulgarian Government Is Raising the Alarm
The Bulgarian Foreign Ministry framed the request as a response to a heightened risk of coordinated disinformation and foreign interference that could undermine the electoral process. That terminology matters. It suggests the concern is not limited to isolated false claims online but to a broader attempt to shape the political environment before voters go to the polls.
The Bulgarian government has also created a temporary mechanism within the Foreign Ministry to co-ordinate its response to hybrid threats and disinformation ahead of the election. Bulgarian media and international reporting indicate that the government has enlisted investigative journalist Hristo Grozev to provide guidance on the initiative.
One detail stands out in the reporting: officials familiar with the request said Bulgaria had previously tended to deny or downplay foreign interference concerns, but that the Foreign Ministry now treats the issue as a priority. That marks a shift in tone as well as policy. It also reflects a wider European pattern, with governments increasingly treating election-related disinformation as a security issue, not simply a communications problem.
Elections Take Place in a Fragile Political Context
The 19 April vote will be Bulgaria’s eighth parliamentary election in five years, a sign of prolonged instability and fragmented politics. In that context, foreign interference risks can become more potent because public trust is already strained, and repeated election cycles tend to create fatigue, cynicism, and vulnerability to polarising narratives.
A recent assessment by the Center for the Study of Democracy described Bulgaria as having one of the EU’s more permissive information environments for malign manipulation, while also warning that institutional responses remain weak. That combination is especially concerning in an election period, where false narratives do not need to persuade everyone; they only need to deepen confusion or suppress confidence in the process.
From a political standpoint, Bulgaria’s appeal to Brussels is significant for three reasons. First, it shows that election interference is now being treated as a cross-border governance challenge within the EU. Second, it underlines the central role of digital platforms in shaping electoral risk. Third, it suggests that Sofia wants to establish a record of preventive action before any dispute over the legitimacy of the result emerges.
This does not prove that a major interference operation is already under way. It does show, however, that Bulgarian authorities believe the risk is serious enough to warrant EU-level monitoring and faster co-ordination with platforms and security actors. In practical terms, that shifts the debate from whether interference is possible to how quickly institutions can identify and contain it.
What to Watch Before 19 April Vote
In the days before the election, attention is likely to focus on whether Bulgarian and EU institutions can respond quickly to viral manipulation campaigns, especially on short-form video platforms and politically aligned websites. Another key issue will be transparency: not only whether disinformation is detected, but whether authorities explain clearly what is being found and how it is being addressed.
That may ultimately shape public confidence as much as the technical administration of the vote itself. Bulgaria’s request for EU support shows how election security in Europe is increasingly tied to information resilience, platform accountability, and rapid institutional coordination to fight foreign disinformation, primarily from Russia.
