From the beginning,
it appeared unlikely for any political party to win a majority. Some believe that the election results officially dropped the final curtain on polity, the time period from
1974 onward, where PASOK and New Democracy succeeded each other in
power. With many voters backing small parties and left-wing Syriza achieving its best result ever
with sweeping gains in constituencies that traditionally belonged to rivals,
there is a merit on that assumption.
However it’s
still very early for rushing to any conclusions. Under this electoral system, New
Democracy and PASOK get 139 seats
with 32.03% of the votes but still cannot build a pro-bailout coalition. The
anti-bailout Syriza on the other side, strives to achieve an alliance of left
leaning politicians. However Communist
Party’s leader Aleka Papariga has already rejected twice the option to be
part of it, making it less likely to happen. Right-wing Panos Kammenos, leader
of anti-bailout Independent Greeks
has been vague, as he avoided living much room for negotiations with Syriza and was strongly opposing any
cooperation with ND and PASOK. Fotis Kouvelis of the Democratic Left, refused to join any
pro-bailout coalition with ND and PASOK and is allegedly keen for an alliance
with progressive forces.
A.Samaras
received today a formal mandate from President Karolos Papoulias, to try and
form a coalition government with other parties. Since his efforts failed, the
mandate will pass tomorrow Tuesday on Syriza that came 2nd in Sunday’s
elections. A.Tsipras will then have 3 days time to come to an end. In case his
talks fail as well, then the mandate passes on Venizelos. No agreement would
prompt to new elections within weeks.
Bottom line
a coalition government needs political agreement on behalf of the parties
involved. With the fragmentation of the popular vote though, the most likely
scenario is a second round of elections. There is strong evidence that politics
has reached a moment and the public might see leaders’ twists and turns so they
don’t get the blame for incompetency to form a coalition.
Inflammatory
Inflammatory
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