Greek
snap election: New Democracy concedes defeat to Tsipras’s leftist Syria
RT,
20
September, 2015
The
Greek left-wing party Syriza is expected to take 145 seats in the
300-member parliament, the Interior Ministry said after counting 66
percent of the vote cast in the snap election Sunday. The leader of
New Democracy, Syriza’s main rival in the polling, has already
conceded defeat.
“The
electoral result appears to be concluding with Syriza and Mr Tspiras
in the lead,”
New Democracy leader Vangelis Meimarakis said. “I
congratulate him and urge him to create the government which is
needed and come to parliament.”
The conservatives themselves have so far secured 75 seats
The conservatives themselves have so far secured 75 seats
Syriza
is still falling short of an outright majority, meaning it will need
coalition partners to form a government. The party hopes to complete
this task within three days.
“I want to repeat what Tsipras said, which is that a government will be formed within three days,” a source within Syriza told Reuters.
“I want to repeat what Tsipras said, which is that a government will be formed within three days,” a source within Syriza told Reuters.
Greece’s
leftist Syriza party is most likely has turned to its former
coalition partner – the right-wing Independent Greeks. The move
will restore the state of affairs that brought Alexis Tsipras to
power in the first place nine months ago.
Independent
“From
tomorrow morning, with Alexis Tsipras as Prime Minister we will form
a government,” Independent
Greeks president Panos Kammenos told reporters.
With 3.6 percent of the vote Kammenos’ party secured 10 seats.
The
bailout agreement reached by Tsipras and EU leaders will be
implemented, the newly-elected party promised. However, “tough
negotiations” on
the subject will continue, party spokeswoman said, Reuters reported.
“This
will be a four-year term government with a strong parliamentary
majority, which will implement the program it promised,” the
news agency cited Olga Gerovassili as saying.
“It
will continue the tough negotiations with the lenders, realizing that
this is the beginning of a battle,” she
added.
“In
Europe today, Greece and the Greek people are synonymous with
resistance and dignity, and this struggle will be continued together
for another four years,” Tsipras
said to cheering crowds, standing in a central Athens square.
“We
have difficulties ahead, but we are also on firm ground,” he
added. “We
won’t recover from the struggle by magic, but it can happen with
hard work,” he dded.
The Syriza’s closest pursuer New Democracy is standing at 28.12 percent so far.
The
far-right Golden Dawn party, led by Nikolaos Michaloliakos, came in
third with 7.09 percent and only 19 seats in Parliament. The party,
labeled as “neo-Nazi” and “fascist” by
the media, has attracted voters with its strong anti-refugee and
anti-austerity stance.
The
snap elections were triggered by the former Greek Prime Minister
Alexis Tsipras who resigned last month after he managed to reach an
agreement with the EU and kept Greece in the eurozone, followed by a
split within Syriza.
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