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Louisa Gouliamaki/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Along with elections in France,
and with a rising tide of anti-austerity sentiment across Europe,
Greece’s vote is expected to have a clear impact on the future of the euro.
The next government, amid a deepening recession and facing likely
social unrest, will have to enforce the country’s loan agreement with
its foreign creditors, which stipulates slashing $15.5 billion from the
state budget over the next two years and completing a crucial bank
recapitalization.
Yet fierce opposition to the bailout terms — tax increases and wage cuts
that have seen Greece’s gross national product drop 20 percent since
2009 and unemployment hit 21 percent — has led to the implosion of the
two parties that have dominated Greek politics for four decades, the
Socialists and the center-right New Democracy, and the rise of fringe
parties on both the right and the left that oppose the loan deal.
“It’s the end of an era. A discredited political system and its contract
with society are coming to an end,” said Stavros Lygeros, a political
commentator and the author of “From Kleptocracy to Bankruptcy,” about
Greece’s economic collapse. “The problem is that there is nothing to
replace it. The old order is dying, but the new one has not yet been
born.”
That loan agreement was hashed out with the temporary government of Prime Minister Lucas Papademos, a former vice president at the European Central Bank who was installed in November. He called early elections last month after his government fulfilled its mandate of signing Greece’s loan agreement with its foreign creditors — the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, known as the troika.
The troika had been keen to have Mr. Papademos stay on as a stabilizing
force to carry out the loan agreement, but he has clearly worn out his
welcome with Greek voters, who see him as more beholden to the country’s
lenders than to them.
But the Socialists and New Democracy, the traditional governing parties,
are equally unpopular with voters, who are expected to punish them for
backing the terms of the bailout. Accustomed to polling more than 80
percent of the vote combined in most elections, this time they will be
fortunate to receive more than about 40 percent combined.
The situation is so volatile that veteran pollsters have had trouble
conducting polls. “Our models of social analysis are based in the past, I
mean in a society which practically does not exist anymore,” said
Costas Panagopoulos, the president of the polling company ALCO.
The Coalition of the Radical Left, called Syriza, which opposes the loan
agreement but wants Greece to stay in the euro zone, is expected to
place third, which would be the party’s strongest showing. It has
campaigned under the slogan, “They chose without us, we’re moving on
without them.”
Those margins are expected to make it extremely difficult for the
front-runner to form a government. Although Greece lacks a tradition of
coalition rule, political analysts say the most likely outcome is for
New Democracy and the Socialists to form a coalition government with the
New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras as prime minister — even though he
has said that he would refuse to share power and would call for new
elections if he did not receive a clear mandate.
The Socialists’ leader, Evangelos Venizelos, who helped negotiate the
loan deal as finance minister and is holding the fractured party
together, has expressed an openness to forming a coalition, as well as
the importance of remaining in the euro zone.
“On Sunday it will be decided whether we stay in Europe and in the euro
zone or whether we condemn the country to bankruptcy and its people to
massive poverty,” he said Friday at a small and lackluster rally.
The economic turmoil has galvanized a range of smaller parties, which
oppose the loan agreement but have little else in common. They include
the right-wing Independent Greeks party, which wants to stay in the euro
zone; and the hard-line Communist Party, which never split with Moscow
during the cold war and wants Greece to leave the European Union.
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