From
Alexander Mercouris
GREEK
REFERENDUM
Results
are pouring in and it is now a virtual certainty that the No vote has
won conclusively. A 60/40 split is not impossible though it may
narrow when we get the full results from Athens and Thessalonika.
A
few brief observations:
1.
The claim that because of the clunkily worded question on the ballot
paper people in Greece don't know what they are voting for is
nonsense. This is a highly politicised society and the overwhelming
majority of those who voted No understood that they were voting
against the latest IMF-EU offer.
2.
The trend of opinion in Greece is now becoming clear. Half a year ago
Syriza won the election with just 36% of the vote. On a higher
turnout its stance is now getting the backing of perhaps as many as
60% of those who voted.
Cutting
liquidity to the Greek banks so as to force a banking crisis and the
EU's transparent attempts to overthrow Syriza are provoking a
backlash and are consolidating support around it.
3.
According to some reports the No campaign may have got the support of
as many as 80% of Greek voters under 35 - putting paid to any
possibility of a colour revolution in Greece at least in the
immediate term - I hardly need to explain why a colour revolution is
impossible in a country where the young would so overwhelmingly and
indeed passionately oppose it.
4.
Perhaps more important for the future of the Greece than the overall
result is some of the individual votes in specific regions.
Traditional right wing strongholds in western Macedonia, parts of the
Peloponnesos, Thrace and parts of Athens are voting No.
There
are reports that the former Prime Minister Antonis Samaras was warned
before the vote by high ranking party insiders that the conservative
New Democracy party he leads could go the same way as PASOK if it
doesn't change course. As of now that is starting to look possible.
I
do not know whether these reports were true. They could have been
scaremongering.
6.
To those who believed that Tsipras called the referendum because he
was planning to hide behind a Yes vote to justify capitulating to the
IMF-EU, that has turned out to be completely wrong.
Tsipras
is still talking about negotiating with the IMF-EU. If he is planning
a capitulation after a No vote then he is toast.
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