Friday, March 29

Tsipras: “I don’t give up. In difficult times I learned to take responsibility and not give up the fight”

Syriza has lost a third of the votes in four years. And it has been four years in which the conservative government of Kyriakos Mitsotakis has had to deal with scandals related to respect for the rule of law, such as spying on journalists and opposition politicians, or the forced returns of migrants, and people seeking asylum and refuge.

Alexis Tsipras, the leader of Syriza who led the left-wing coalition to the top, which reached the government with 36% of the votes with an alternative discourse to the hegemonic one of the Europe of cuts in the midst of the financial crisis, has achieved this Sunday 20%, far from the 31% of 2019, and even further from the 40% achieved by the current prime minister.

Although that 20% is a figure that many parties would surely see as a good electoral result, the truth is that Tsipras himself described it on Sunday as “extremely negative.”

“In difficult times I learned to take responsibility and not give up the fight,” Tsipras said in a video message on Monday: “Here I am. I don’t give up in the middle of a difficult battle. Yesterday was election day and today is the first day of the battle for the next election. Yesterday New Democracy won, but at the same time the system of proportional representation was defeated”.

The leader of Syriza has also reached out to Pasok, the social democratic party that achieved 11% after being on the verge of disappearing from Greek political life due to its management of the financial crisis at the hands of the troika and New Democracy: “The progressive forces [Pasok; Mera25, de Varoufakis; Course to Freedom, de Zoé Konstantopoulou] those we reached out to throughout the electoral campaign deployed a front almost exclusively against Syriza. And, yesterday, at the moment of the historic electoral victory of the right, they celebrated the fall of Syriza”.

“We looked at the country, they looked at their own camp”, Tsipras said: “In the next elections we have the responsibility, first of all, to avoid an all-powerful and uncontrollable prime minister, but also to protect the prominent presence of the left in the political life of the country as a force that comes from afar and will go far. Syriza is and will continue to be the main instrument of the progressive forces and the spokesperson for the popular and social interests for the defense of the world of work and to prevent the restoration of the diabolical two-party system”.

New Democracy has managed to obtain 40.79% of the votes, which translates into 146 seats, close to the 151 absolute majority, but without achieving it, leading to probable new elections in a few weeks. The Syriza of former Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, for its part, remains in 20% of the votes and 71 seats, which are insufficient for a sum of lefts with Pasok (11.5% and 41 seats) and Mera25 of the former Minister of Finance Yanis Varoufakis (2.3% and 0 seats, the cut to enter the Greek Parliament is 3%).

The communists of the KKE, for their part, have reached 7.1%, which would translate into 26 seats, while the party of the former president of the Greek Parliament, Course to Freedom, Zoé Konstantopoulou –formerly of Syriza and Popular Unity– would achieve 2.6% and 0 seats.

For its part, the extreme right of Greek Solution would enter with 4.5% and 16 seats.

electoral repetition

New Democracy aspired to a “broad” percentage in the elections, which is what it achieved this Sunday. He caresses the absolute majority, which feeds the carrot of repetition, which will be held with a new electoral system that gives priority to the winner of the elections.

The electoral system that has been applied in these elections on Sunday is the one approved during the Syriza government, of a proportional nature. However, in the next electoral appointment, the one approved by New Democracy would be applied, which prevails over the first. And if an absolute majority is not formed in the government negotiations -Parliament has 300 seats-, on June 25 or July 2 it will go to the polls again, with a system that, from the outset, grants 20 extra seats to the first.

In addition, the parties that achieve between 25% and 40% of the votes will receive one seat for every half percentage point in that bracket (up to a maximum of 30 seats), before proceeding to the proportional distribution.





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