1. Petar Moskov was among the leading members of the Reformist Bloc.

1. Petar Moskov was among the leading members of the Reformist Bloc.
In 2004, Petar Moskov was one of the founding members of the DSB.
On 7 November 2014, Petar Moskov assumed his duties as Minister of Health of Bulgaria, succeeding Miroslav Nenkov.
Petar Moskov reacted by accusing them of "returning to 1917" and postulated that his former party might desire to "intern himself and his family" in a prison.
In March 2019, Petar Moskov announced that he would be forming a right-wing religious conservative political party dubbed the Conservative Rightist Unity, after separating from the Reformist Bloc as he thought it was not right-wing enough.
Petar Moskov has declared that the previous right-wing governments' policies were akin to "a grandmother and grandfather watching porn together to see if they get married".
Petar Moskov has cited the Trump Administration and Viktor Orban's Hungary as examples of the type of right-wing conservatism his would seek to impose.
Petar Moskov sought to disfranchise former communists and BZNS members through a process of "criminal lustration", as well as those with lower education qualifications by one of his proposals to ban people that have not attained a certain level of academic education from voting in elections or referendums.
In December 2014, Petar Moskov declared that the ministry of Healthcare would refuse to send ambulances or medical personnel to neighbourhoods inhabited primarily by Bulgaria's Roma minority after stating that there were incidents of assaults on ambulances in those neighbourhoods.
Petar Moskov was brought to criminal trial, accused of non-fulfilment of his duties through his acceptance of the delivery of non-authorized vaccines for use in Bulgaria.
Petar Moskov was separately indicted of allegedly aiding in the creation of a bad government contract in which Bulgaria gave away 5,000,000 vaccine doses to a company for free.
Petar Moskov is a cousin of the film director Tedi Moskov.