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Trilistnik is a town with about 800 people, located near the “Trakia” highway, but no noise from cars is heard. Shortly after the detour, you cross a narrow road, around which there are green meadows and spring trees in bloom. All that is heard is the song of the birds. A large “Centro” sign welcomes those who enter, the streets of the town have no names, only numbers. “New York has seen us,” laughs Mayor Mircho Petrov.
From the elderly grandparents to the young mothers and the men drinking beer in the only pub, to the workers in the sewing shop and the grandmother who pays her taxes and barely hears, everyone will vote. “Because that’s the way it should be”, “because we can’t complain if we haven’t voted”, “because what else can we do?” In the last elections, more than half of the voters went to the polls, now there are even more.
Most people hope that the elections will lead to a change, to a “better situation”, to “a rectification of the situation”, to “a reversal of things.” At the same time, they are skeptical that there will be movement after the elections and hope that the situation will remain the same. Some say there should be new players and have not decided yet, others have long ago chosen who to vote for on Sunday.
What are the moods in the village of Trilistnik – here