Assen Vassilev
Assen Vaskov Vassilev (Bulgarian: Асен Васков Василев, born 9 September 1977) is a Bulgarian politician and economist who served as Deputy Prime Minister of Bulgaria from 2021 to 2022 and as Minister of Finance on three occasions from 2021 to 2024. A member of the PP party, which he co-founded with Kiril Petkov and currently leads on his own after Petkov’s resignation. He is currently serving as Member of the National Assembly.[1] EducationVassilev earned a degree in economics from Harvard University in 2000 and continued studies at Harvard Business School.[2][3][4] Professional careerVassilev is a co-founder and president of Everbeard, an airline ticket pricing company. It is partly funded by the Singapore National Research Fund and the first Skype investor.[5] Vassilev was the co-founder and director of the Centre for Economic Strategy and Competitiveness. He is a lecturer in the Program for Economic Growth and Development, a branch of Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski” and with the Centre for Strategy and Competitiveness of Harvard Business School.[6] From 1999 to 2004, Vassilev worked as a consultant for Monitor Group in the US, Canada, Europe, and South Africa. He managed marketing and strategic development projects for large international companies in the fields of telecommunications, energy, mining, insurance, and several major consumer goods manufacturers.[7] Political careerIn 2013 Vassilev was Minister of Economy, Energy and Tourism in the caretaker government of Marin Raykov. From 12 May to 16 September 2021, he was Minister of Finance in the caretaker government of Stefan Yanev. On 19 September 2021, together with Kiril Petkov, Vassilev presented his new political project “We continue the change”.[8][9] He was the leader of the party list in Haskovo and Sofia 23 for the 2021 Bulgarian general election on 14 November.[10] The party won the most seats in the new parliament and formed a coalition government on 13 December 2021. Vassilev became Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance in the short-lived Petkov government.[11][12] The Petkov government’s mandate ended in late June 2022 after Prime Minister Kiril Petkov resigned following a no-confidence vote, and on 1 July President Rumen Radev asked Vassilev to form a new government.[13] One week later, as prescribed by the constitution, Vassilev informed the president that his party only had the support of 117 members, falling four short of the majority. “Unfortunately, we failed to gather enough support to implement the politics that our… government would have wanted to push through. We could not get the support needed to rid Bulgaria of corruption and make the state work for the people, instead of channelling taxpayers’ money into a few select companies that can use it to corrupt the political class. We hope that in the next elections, the additional four deputies will be elected by the people.”[14] In May 2024 Vassilev became embroiled in a scandal revealed when someone leaked wiretaps of conversations that should have remained private.[15] Other activities
Lukoil refinery derogationFinance Minister Assen Vassilev was the key figure who requested an EU derogation in 2022 allowing the Lukoil Neftohim Burgas refinery to continue processing Russian-origin oil and selling its products—under specific conditions—within the European Union. He threatened to veto the EU’s oil sanctions package unless Bulgaria secured this exemption, arguing it was essential for national energy security and ensured the refinery could operate smoothly. In 2023, opposition leaders brought a case to the General prosecutor’s office over alleged bribe payments from the Russian oil company. In 2024 Parliament cut the derogation short. Customs smuggling bribesIn November 2024, Petya Bankova, the former Customs Agency director, testified in court that Assen Vassilev, who was then finance minister, orchestrated smuggling operations and was the final recipient of large bribes—“hundreds of thousands of leva”—from smugglers, including an alleged 120,000 leva per truck of “vapes.”[17] References
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