I wouldn't encourage you to move to Bulgaria if Drumpf gets elected, because an election is a pretty bogus reason to emigrate, but I would encourage you to move to Bulgaria if it appeals to you. Is it a good destination? I think so, but it's certainly not for everyone.
I think you really need to be a bit cyberpunk to love the aesthetics of urban post-Soviet Bulgaria (easier to love the romantic ideal of 19th century-style village life). When people ask me what Bulgaria "is like", I tell them that it looks like the future. I'm only half-joking.
It's very affordable, immigrant-friendly, unbelievably safe compared to the US, and generally free of the social conflicts which stress richer EU societies. The food's pretty good, the health care ain't bad, and the climate is variable enough to be interesting without extremes to make it hard. The police are shockingly non-violent, and I've yet to see or hear anything to suggest that their reputation for corruption is legitimate. While antiquated, the government is oddly efficient and lax in regulations. (I know that I've been in Bulgaria too long when returning to the US feels like entering a police state.)
I admit: It's not the promised land for most people. We're talking about country so economically undesirable that Syrian refugees don't want to stay. The wages are terrible and unemployment is high, so you really need some kind of external income source to survive. You'd need a hell of an entrepreneurial spirit to thrive economically in Bulgaria, but life can be pretty easy without much income. The infrastructure shows the effects of entropy after 25 years of austerity and the architecture of everything build after WWII has all the charm of Alcatraz (if The Rock had better graffitti).
Personally, the worst things about Bulgaria are (1) that it's too damn far from North America, and (2) this continent has never brewed a half-decent IPA. On the upside, the monthly savings on a month's rent pretty nearly buys a round-trip to Portland.