This
is a must-see video
Suicide
& Revolt: 'Some EU states ready for Euro Spring'
It's
endgame today in Athens, where political party leaders are beginning
a last-ditch effort to form a coalition. If they fail, Greece would
have to stage a new election - one predicted to bolster anti-bailout
factions even more. And as uncertainty grips Greece, its once
unthinkable exit from the Eurozone is looking increasingly likely. In
the country itself, banks have reportedly begun to prepare for a
switch to the former currency, the drachma. The EU is also deeply
worried over the possible consequences - but maintains Greece's exit
won't be fatal. But political analyst Dr. Alessandro Politi says it
shouldn't be about preserving the Euro, but helping the people....
Greece:
Nation on the brink
As
the President makes a last-ditch effort to forge a unity government,
Michael Pooler and David Connett report on what will happen if the
country has to go back to the polls
13
May, 2012
President
Karolos Papoulias will today become the fourth senior politician in
Greece to attempt to form a new government for the debt-stricken
country. President Papoulias last night called Greece's political
leaders to a meeting in a last-ditch attempt to forge a unity
government.
The
President will meet the leaders of all parties in parliament and try
one last time to persuade them to create a government or, if they
cannot, to call a new election, expected next month. The presidential
move followed his meeting with the socialist Pasok party leader,
Evangelos Venizelos, at which Mr Venizelos surrendered his mandate to
form a government. Mr Venizelos gave up the mandate after failing to
persuade Alexis Tsipras, leader of the hardline leftist Syriza
coalition, to form a unity government.
In
televised remarks, Mr Venizelos yesterday urged the President to lean
on Mr Tsipras to join an "ecumenical government". "I
put this forth to Mr Tsipras. I haven't received a positive
response," Mr Venizelos said. "I believe that is where your
efforts should be focused during the consultations." Antonis
Samaras, leader of the conservative New Democracy party, abandoned
efforts to form a governing coalition earlier in the week.
If
the President's bid, the fourth such attempt in the past seven days,
fails, fresh elections will be held which many believe will
effectively become a vote on whether Greece should stay in the single
currency eurozone. Last Sunday Greek voters humiliated the
pro-bailout parties that support tying Greece to drastic spending
cuts. The results left none of the parties with enough seats to form
a government to secure the next tranche of financial aid. Without aid
from the EU and the IMF, Greece risks bankruptcy in weeks and
potential ejection from the eurozone. The election results led the
euro to drop to its lowest point against sterling in more than three
years.
Opinion
polls conducted in the days following the election suggest any
attempt to persuade Mr Tsipras to join a government that supports the
bailout will fail. The polls showed growing support for Mr Tsipras
and his anti-bailout coalition. A newspaper poll yesterday showed the
Syriza coalition would take 25.5 per cent of votes – almost 9
points higher than its election result. A poll earlier in the week
showed an even greater lead. Both results would put the Tsipras-led
coalition ahead of the New Democracy and Pasok parties, with 50 more
seats in the 300-seat parliament.
Mr
Tsipras says the bailout deal must be torn up, though like most
Greeks he still wants to keep the euro, a position seen in Brussels
as untenable without the bailout's austerity commitments. Such views
are attracting support, particularly from the young. More than half
of young Greeks are now unemployed and Mr Tsipras's good looks and
self-confidence have helped make him their hero. The two main
parties' middle-aged leaders are widely seen as out of touch.
Both
Mr Venizelos and Mr Samaras warn that Greece is heading for ejection
from the euro and bankruptcy. If a second election does take place,
they will be hoping frightened voters return to the traditional
parties. The bailout requires Greece to cut wages, raise taxes, fire
state employees, sell off state assets and restructure labour laws.
EU leaders say it is necessary if Greece is ever to become solvent.
But
opponents say the harsh medicine is self-defeating, making it
impossible for Greece to emerge from the eurozone's worst recession,
which has now ground on for five years.
Syriza
argues that Greece can abandon the bailout and European leaders will
not carry out their threats to withhold funding, because they cannot
risk the damage to other EU countries that would be caused by a Greek
collapse. "They will be begging us to take the money,"
Syriza's deputy, Dimitris Stratoulis, claimed on Friday.
But
European leaders say the next tranche of loans, due in late June, is
in jeopardy if Greece does not emerge with a government committed to
the bailout package. If a second election is held, voters will be
given a stark choice, said Chris Williamson of the London-based
research firm Markit. "I think it is going to be increasingly
presented as a vote to effectively leave the euro. That's how it will
be seen outside Greece, and the rhetoric will build up to ensure that
voters are aware of the implications."
Central
bankers across Europe are already discussing the possibility of a
Greek exit from the euro and how to handle the fallout, the Swedish
Riksbank's deputy governor, Per Jansson, admitted yesterday.
Europe
is "certainly more resilient" to a Greek exit than it was
two years ago, when the bloc would have been "massively
underprepared", the EU Economic and Monetary Commissioner, Olli
Rehn, told a conference in Estonia. But he warned that "it would
be much worse for Greece and Greek citizens, especially less well-off
Greek citizens, if Greece left the euro than for Europe. Europe also
would suffer, but Greece would suffer more."
A
Greek exit from the euro could be "technically" managed,
but would damage confidence in the monetary union, said Patrick
Honohan, a European Central Bank governing council member. A Greek
departure would be "destabilising" for the rest of the euro
area, and all sides are trying to avoid it, he said. "It is not
necessarily fatal, but it is not attractive."
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