Showing posts with label Greek Elections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greek Elections. Show all posts

Sunday, January 25, 2015

General Elections in Greece: Keep Calm and Vote for Greece! #Ekloges2015



Critical elections take place in Greece today, probably the most critical for Greece since 1974.
After 5 years of austerity, crippling taxes and reform which has left much of the political party machinery and the oligarchs largely untouched, the poor and the needy tragically worse off and  unemployment extremely high, Greece's people are being asked to cast their vote and decide who it wants to lead it for the next four years.
Whatever the outcome today, whoever comes to power, it is essential that Greece stands strong and looks to the future. 

Irrespective of the party we voted for, it is essential that from tomorrow we stand together and work for the future, without hate, fear or rancour.
 
Today, let's vote with the future of Greece as our guide, the future of our children. 
Not MY child's or YOUR child's, but the future of all OUR children. 
Whatever political party we support, let's all vote for GREECE and the future! 

Happy voting!

Οποιο κόμμα και να βγει σήμερα η Ελλάδα θα σταθεί όρθια και θα πάει μπροστά. 

 Στη χώρα που γέννησε την δημοκρατία πρεπει από αύριο οι πάντες να σταθούμε ενομένοι και αποφασισμένοι να κοιτάξουμε μπροστά, χωρίς μίσος, φόβους και μιζέρια. 
Ας ψηφίσουμε με γνώμονα μόνο την Ελλάδα και το μέλλον των παιδιών ΜΑΣ... 
όχι του δικού ΜΟΥ ή του δικού ΣΟΥ, αλλά όλων των παιδιών της Ελλάδας! 

 Όποιο κι' αν είναι το κόμμα μας, ας ψηφίσουμε όλοι... για την Ελλάδα! 
Το αξίζει! 

Καλό βόλι!



At Global Greek World, We ♥ Greece...and it shows! 
© GlobalGreekWorld 2009 - 2015 All Rights Reserved

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Ας Μην Ξεχάσουμε τον Μαυρογιαλούρο! Greek Local Elections 2014 - Δημοτικές Εκλογές 2014


For those who love the classic Black and White Greek Movies here is one very appropriate for the times we live in, in view of all the corruption scandals that have occurred over the years and particularly those that have come to light in the last few years. 


This oh-so-reflective-of-Greek-Society film should be required viewing by all those taking public office and should be repeated once a week by all TV channels in Greece in case we the people forget!




It is a political satire, ' Yparhei kai Filotimo' with Lambros Konstandaras as Andreas Mavrogialouros, the consummate Greek politician... 

 
 
Andreas Mavrogialouros is a minister of the Greek government who goes to visit a small village for the inauguration of a local maternity clinic. Going there he gets more than he bargained for but in the process discovers that his associates have been fooling him for years, using state funds to accumulate wealth, property and riches for themselves while the people around them suffer. They are excluded from the public institutions they have helped finance through their taxes, solely because of their political ID, because they belong to the wrong political party! 

Sound familiar? The film is over 50 years old and in many ways not much appears to have changed since then, but we are hopeful! .... 


We at Global Greek World are hoping that our politicians, local and national, are finally getting the message and are genuinely ready to shed the dreadful image the people have of them by acting for the good of the people at last!

We are hoping that from tomorrow things will change for the better, at least locally!

 
Enjoy &
Kali Psifo!!! :) !!!


 


                                        


At Global Greek World, We ♥ Greece...and it shows!
© GlobalGreekWorld 2014 All Rights Reserved

Saturday, June 16, 2012

18 Years On: Remembering Manos Hadjidakis



Eighteen years ago today, Greece sadly farewelled one of her most talented. Internationally acclaimed composer Manos Hadjidakis, passed into eternity leaving behind him a wealth of beautiful music, his legacy to Greece, his people and the world.

His most well known, Never on Sunday, the internationally acclaimed title song from the film starring Melina Mercouri and directed by Jules Dassin, became an instant success around the world and granted him an Academy Award in 1960. 

With the Greek elections in just a couple of days, this Hadjidakis song, with lyrics by the great Nikos Gatsos, which talks about Greece and the 1821 War of Independence and its heroes, seems to be particularly appropriate right now, at a time when our people and this beautiful and historic homeland is desperately seeking direction and leadership from non-existent leaders...


 

'Tsamikos' sung by Global Greek of the Year, Mario Frangoulis...

Στίχοι: Νίκος Γκάτσος
Μουσική: Μάνος Χατζιδάκις
Πρώτη εκτέλεση: Μανώλης Μητσιάς

Στα κακοτράχαλα τα βουνά
με το σουράβλι και το ζουρνά
πάνω στην πέτρα την αγιασμένη
χορεύουν τώρα τρεις αντρειωμένοι.
Ο Νικηφόρος κι ο Διγενής
κι ο γιος της Άννας της Κομνηνής.

Δική τους είναι μια φλούδα γης
μα εσύ Χριστέ μου τους ευλογείς
για να γλυτώσουν αυτή τη φλούδα
απ' το τσακάλι και την αρκούδα.
Δες πώς χορεύει ο Νικηταράς
κι αηδόνι γίνεται ο ταμπουράς.

Από την Ήπειρο στο Μοριά
κι απ' το σκοτάδι στη λευτεριά
το πανηγύρι κρατάει χρόνια
στα μαρμαρένια του χάρου αλώνια.
Κριτής κι αφέντης είν' ο Θεός
και δραγουμάνος του ο λαός.

Source: Stixoi 

Just click on the arrow to listen to some more of Hadjidakis' unforgettable melodies in the playlist below.


Read more:
Manos Hadjidakis - Official Website
Manos Hadjidakis on Wikipedia

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Greece and the EU Referendum: Do We Stay or Do We Go?

EU Referendum
Do we stay or do we go?


The Greek elections on May 6, 2012, resulted in a non-election of any one particular party and new elections will be held in Greece on June 17, 2012.

Shortly after the elections, and with the entire world discussing the result of the Greek elections, the rising star of Alexis Tsipras, and the possibility of the left coalition SYRIZA coming to power, the ambiguous messages that the various party constituents were  sending out sent people scuttling to their banks to withdraw what few euros had been left in the banking system. 

According to the report/letter filed by outgoing PM Papademos, 700 million euros had been removed from the banking system just in the few days following the election, understandable perhaps but another nail the coffin of the confidence people had in any new government to handle the financial affairs of the country.

The May 6 vote and the rise in the vote to SYRIZA, and Independent Greeks along with the rise in popularity of the Neo Nazi party Chryssi Avgi was nothing more than a protest vote.  It wasn't so much that people were voting FOR these parties, it was more that they were voting AGAINST the two major players - PASOK and Nea Dimokratia - the two parties perceived to be the main perpetrators of the economic tragedy which had befallen Greece in the last few years, and the unprecedented austerity measures imposed on the people as a result.

The percentages gained by SYRIZA, Independent Greeks and Chryssi Avgi surprised the parties themselves, and sent the PASOK and ND leaders Venizelos and Samaras into a cooperation frenzy, which had it happened 3 years ago, may well have saved the economy. 

In the aftermath of the election there was much discussion about Greece's future in the Eurozone and the European Union, with as many conflicting messages coming out of Europe as there were coming out of Greece, with the various EU officials alternating between ear-pulling, cajoling and blackmailing of Greece, the 'naughty child' of Europe, every other day, and the press both inside and outside Greece scaremongering, to say the least.

Friday's 'announcement' that German Chancellor Angela Merkel had asked President Papoulias to have a referendum on whether Greece should stay in the Eurozone/EU or not, the subsequent denials, and thread of denials/undenials was unbelievable. The Spiegel insisted it had happened, but the Chancellor's office is still denying it! 

Hypocritical, considering that this same Chancellor, along with the rest of the EU leaders had lambasted the PM of the time George Papandreou for daring to suggest such a thing on the 26th of October 2011 and was the beginning of the end for him as Prime Minister, even though some labelled it as a brilliant move!

If they were 'smart', they would have called his bluff, despite the crazy timing (which led many in Greece to make a joke of the whole thing at the time - saying that somebody had reversed the order when they gave GAP the instruction sheet**) and let a referendum go ahead... who better than the people to decide their fate?

It might have meant a Grexit, but who's to say that the Greek people would vote for an exit, when, even now, the latest polls say that over 80% of the people want to STAY in the Eurozone? The only reason that SYRIZA and Alexis Tsipras hold appeal for some Greek voters is because he reiterates the need to rewrite any Memorandum of Agreement to bring it to more workable levels. Most of the Greek people know that there need to be major reforms, but in order for those reforms to work, the people have to be on their feet...not down and out, and the economy still breathing not on life support. What is happening is unbelievable, in a country where homeless and soup kitchens were virtually unknown words, suddenly even people who had been relatively well off are in that unenviable position, and more and more people are nouveau poor, nouveau unemployed.

Finally, the spectre of a SYRIZA win has got Europe talking about relaxing some of the repayment conditions, Eurobonds, actual fiscal union and everyone is talking about a Greek exit from the Euro, something that no one seems to want, either inside Greece or out, so why is it being spoken about? Bloomberg has even published a scenario for the exit...

We decided to put it to the people and put a quick poll in our sidebar just after the May 6 Greek elections - wonder if Ms Merkel has been following our blog too... :)

so....

What do YOU think?


What should Greece do?


Please go to our sidebar and vote, then share with your friends, so they can vote too!



**In the meantime, here's the joke we were talking about above: 


Ο Γιωργος είναι καλός πρωθυπουργός αλλά σε REWIND!!..
σκέψου τα όλα με αυτή τη σειρά: 
αρχικά μας ζητάει δημοψήφισμα, 
έπειτα κουρεύει το χρέος κατά 50%, 
τέλος παίρνει και 110 δις από το ΔΝΤ και 
μετά ανακοινώνει πως "Λεφτά υπάρχουν!" ... 
ποιος του έδωσε ανάποδα το ντοσιέ ??!!!!!!!

GAP is a good PM but in REWIND! 
Think about it all, in this order: 
Firstly he asks for a referendum, 
then he gets a 50% 'haircut', 
finally he gets 110 billion from the IMF and 
then he announces 'The funds exist - LEFTA YPARHOYN'... 
who the hell gave him the file upside down?!!!

The results on 16 June 2012 - the day our Poll closed, one day before the Greek elections, which effectively confirmed that the majority of Greeks want to stay in the Eurozone ...

Greece and Europe: If there was a referendum tomorrow in Greece how would you vote?

Stay in the EU, Stay in the Eurozone
  73 (51%)
Stay in the EU, Leave the Eurozone
  39 (27%)
Leave the EU, Leave the Eurozone
  26 (18%)
Don't know/Undecided
  5 (3%)

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Seeking Leadership, Heroism, Courage, and Unity, in Greece's Politicians Today

 Excerpt from the Greek Presidency's Calendar

At 2pm today Greece's President Papoulias hosted the latest meeting of Greece's political chiefs, Samaras, Tsipras, Venizelos, Kouvelis, and Kammenos. The people of Greece and the rest of the world waited with bated breath today, as they have done for the last 10 days, to see whether there would be any result from today's  meeting with the President of the Republic, Karolos Papoulias at the President's official residence in Herodus Atticus Street.

The people of Greece spoke on May 6 and spoke very loudly - the vote split and the message was clear:  

We don't know who we want, but we do know that we don't want ONE of you to govern, we don't trust you! 

Instead of being perturbed by the rise of the extreme Right Wing Xrysi Avgi and seeking ways to eradicate the causes of this rise, instead of listening to the voters' message and acting on it, the Chiefs, (we call them Chiefs because we cannot refer to any of them as leaders... they are anything but LEADERS), continue to squabble, playing out their childish egotistical games of oneupmanship and petty party politics, trying to hold on to a system that is clearly in its death throes, at the expense of the Greek people and the Greek economy.

Displaying an unbelievable level of immaturity, arrogance, a distinct lack of leadership,  responsibility and lack of commitment to the country they have chosen to serve, they appeared unable, or rather unwilling, to find common ground in order to form a coalition government for the good of our homeland, to help this amazing country get out of the downward spiral and go forward.

Instead of uniting for the common good, as mandated by the people, each of these men insisted on going in different directions with a different agenda but without any clear cut plan or solution for a way out of the crisis...

Flashback to 2011...


 New Zealand Veterans hosted by President Papoulias in the Leaders' Room
PhotoSource: ANA-MPA

At the same time exactly, at 2pm, one year ago, and in the very same room, President Papoulias hosted a group of very different men from the other side of the world.

The President of Greece welcomed Bill Bristow, Brant Robinson, Roye Hammond, Jim Wilson and Bain McKay as the heroes they were and paid tribute to them...

 President Papoulias welcomes the NZ Battle of Crete Veterans to Greece
Source: New Zealanders in Greece

A group of men, all over 90 years of age, New Zealand Veterans of the 1941 Battle of Crete, who had come to Greece from the other side of the world on a pilgrimage, an Enduring Legacy Pilgrimage, a voyage of remembrance....

They were in Greece to commemorate the 70th Anniversary of that epic battle.            

Many of those soldiers fell in the course of duty and were buried in Greece, in Souda Bay in Crete, in Alimos in Athens and in other places around Greece.

Many survived, assisted by Cretan civilians risking their own lives, and escaped over the tough Cretan mountains to safety in Africa.

They didn't forget and came back to Greece to thank those who helped them, honour those that fell and above all remember...

What united these men, these valiant men, who in their 20's had come to the other side of the world in 1941, to fight a war that wasn't really theirs, was their belief in Freedom and Democracy, and their belief in creating a better place for their children.

United and with a common goal, they defended those principles in the very country that invented democracy and gave it to the world, and in doing so, assisted in changing the course of World War II, something very few believed could happen.

Our political chiefs would do well to pause and reflect... rediscover their values and their ethos, and get to work to save Greece.

The 90 year old heroes from New Zealand should serve as examples of selfless and courageous heroism, willing to sacrifice themselves for the future of their country, for the future of their children.

Our political chiefs would do well to do the same, put aside their differences, unite and work together, for the future of Greece, for the sake of their children and ours...


Source: New Zealanders in Greece

Related Articles:

The Battle for Crete:70 Years On - As Relevant as Ever

Ned and Katina: A Real-Life Love Story that started with the Battle of Crete



Saturday, May 5, 2012

General Elections in Greece: Read, Analyse, Reflect...then Vote!


We thought we would share with you this great profile put together by the English Edition of Kathimerini of the main parties running in tomorrow's Greek elections and which have a chance of getting into Parliament. We added Dimiourgia Xana which wasn't in the original list because we think there is quite a bit of support for this party and the things it stands for.

PASOK

Founded: 1974
Leader: Evangelos Venizelos


Brief history: The Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) was formed by Andreas Papandreou following the collapse of the military dictatorship in 1974 and grew to be the dominant force in Greek politics for the next 38 years. It came to power in 1981 and became synonymous with a state-centric economic model and the broadening of the public sector. Heading the party’s so-called “modernizing” wing, Costas Simitis succeeded Papandreou in 1996. He led Greece into the euro on the back of some belt-tightening but made way for George Papandreou, Andreas’s son, before the 2004 elections as PASOK began to flag after many years in office and was unable to shake off its association with corruption. Following a period of unsure leadership, George Papandreou was elected prime minister in 2009 but soon had to deal with a major debt crisis that led to Greece being bailed out by the EU and IMF. PASOK’s reliance on higher taxes rather than public reforms and spending cuts to reduce Greece’s deficit undermined the party’s popularity further. Papandreou resigned as prime minister last November and as PASOK leader earlier this year. He was succeeded by one-time leadership rival and former Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos.

Main campaign points: Venizelos says he will ask the EU and IMF to extend Greece’s fiscal adjustment period by one year, until 2015, in order to ease the impact on taxpayers. He has also presented a “National Regeneration Plan” which is based on a reformed tax system that will remain stable for 10 years and will ease the burden on low income earners and pensioners. PASOK also advocates incentives for young people to turn to farming and steps to increase liquidity for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). The party has pledged to clamp down on illegal immigration and Greece's citizens' protection minister, a Socialist, recently announced plans to create 30 detention centers to house undocumented immigrants, who don't qualify for asylum, before they are deported. There is not much left of Papandreou's “green growth” policies in PASOK's new program.

Campaign slogan: Greeks are trying and will succeed
2009 election result: 43.92 percent
April 20 opinion poll rating: 14 percent

New Democracy


Founded: 1974
Leader: Antonis Samaras


Brief history:
The conservative party was founded in 1974 by veteran politician Constantine Karamanlis, who became Greece’s first prime minister following the fall of the military dictatorship. Karamanlis stepped aside in 1980 and the party suffered a series of election defeats at the hands of PASOK before Constantine Mitsotakis led it to power in 1990. But his turbulent period in office ended in 1993 when an ND mutiny led by Antonis Samaras triggered the government's collapse and PASOK's return to power. Costas Karamanlis, nephew of Constantine, led the party to a narrow election defeat in 2000. In 2004, however, he became Greece’s youngest prime minister thanks to a big election win and a policy of appealing to the middle ground. However, Karamanlis’s government largely struggled to deliver on the economic and public sector reforms it had promised and in its later stages became embroiled in corruption scandals. It suffered a landslide defeat in 2009, leaving behind a burgeoning public deficit and debt. Rehabilitated after a long period in the political wilderness, Samaras succeeded Karamanlis and quickly sought to move the party to the right. New Democracy opposed the first EU-IMF bailout but last November reluctantly joined the coalition government that negotiated the second loan agreement.

Main campaign points: Samaras argues that the terms of the EU-IMF loan deal do not allow enough scope for growth. He advocates a 15 percent flat tax for business and the lowering of VAT. He also supports a fully fledged privatization program and has suggested that some 11 billion euros in savings that Greece has to make in 2013 and 2014 can come from slashing public sector waste. New Democracy has pledged to tighten up immigration rules and repeal a law allowing second-generation migrants to claim Greek citizenship. Samaras, who does not shy away from references to “God” or “the nation,” has sought to ramp up the conservatives' ethical message, promising to do away with deputies' parliamentary immunity from prosecution and set up a parliamentary committee to investigate past misdeeds that led to the country's economic meltdown.

Campaign slogan: Greece is going to make it
2009 election result: 33.48 percent
April 20 opinion poll rating: 21.5 percent

Communist Party of Greece (KKE)


Founded: 1918
Leader: Aleka Papariga



Brief history: Founded in the wake of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, the Greek Communist Party was initially known as the Socialist Labor Party of Greece. It adopted Marxist-Leninist principles in 1924 and has since functioned according to democratic centralism.
It played a significant role in the formation of trade unions but the party was outlawed by dictator Ioannis Metaxas in 1936. Members of KKE played a significant role in Greece’s resistance to the Nazi occupation in World War II but political differences then sparked the civil war, which ended in 1949 and led to KKE being outlawed again. It did not regain legal status until the collapse of the military dictatorship in 1974. However, the Communist Party split into two: the “exterior,” which took its lead from Moscow, and the “interior,” which developed a more independent voice. The latter merged in 1989 with other leftist parties to form the Synaspismos coalition, which later became part of SYRIZA. KKE has maintained a staunch Marxist-Leninist line since then, refusing to cooperate with other parties -- even to organize strikes or demonstrations -- and insisting on nothing less than the overthrow of the capitalist system.

Main campaign points: KKE is the only party to openly favor a Greek exit from the eurozone and the European Union, arguing that the Arab Spring has opened up other avenues of cooperation. It wants a freeze on all private debts to the banks and the state until Greece exits the crisis, a minimum pension of 1,150 euros and a freeze on privatizations. Party leader Aleka Papariga says KKE will not take part in any coalition government and that voters should back her party so it can obstruct the imposition of measures that would damage workers’ interests and incomes. KKE wants to legalize immigrant workers and grant asylum to the victims of imperialist wars. It advocates scrapping Dublin II regulations, which enable European governments to send illegal immigrants back to the first EU country of entry.

Campaign slogan: Fight back
2009 election result: 7.54 percent
April 20 opinion poll rating: 11 percent

Popular Orthodox Rally (LAOS)


Founded: 2000
Leader: Giorgos Karatzaferis


Brief history: LAOS, a right-wing nationalist party, was formed by Giorgos Karatzaferis in 2000 after he was expelled from New Democracy following his criticism of party leader Costas Karamanlis. While LAOS initially espoused an ultra-nationalist line and welcomed members with an extremist past, the party has -- at least publicly -- gradually eased some of its rhetoric, although it remains hardline on the immigration issue. LAOS was the only party apart from PASOK to vote in favor of the first bailout in 2010 and became a junior partner in the coalition government formed last November. Karatzaferis, however, decided to quit the administration shortly before the second loan agreement was voted in Parliament. In the process, LAOS lost its two most prominent MPs -- Makis Voridis and Adonis Georgiadis -- to New Democracy. Karatzaferis’s equivocal stance over the last few months led to a serious dip in LAOS’s poll ratings.

Main campaign points: LAOS is still a party that is based around the ubiquitous Karatzaferis, who is adept at using media coverage to his advantage. The party wants the mass repatriation of illegal immigrants in a bid to curb crime and unemployment, and has called for a change in the law to allow victims to shoot robbers. LAOS has said that the next Greek government should negotiate a new haircut with its lenders so that its debt falls to between 100 and 120 billion euros, or about a third of what it is now. It wants Germany to pay war reparations for crimes committed by the Nazi regime during its invasion of Greece in World War II.

Campaign slogan: Everything for Greece
2009 election result: 5.63 percent
April 20 opinion poll rating: 3 percent

Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA)


Founded: 2004
Leader: Alexis Tsipras


Brief history: SYRIZA was born out of the cooperation of a number of leftist groups, some with their roots in communist movements. Following a bumpy start, the coalition more than doubled the number of its MPs to 14 in the 2007 elections under the leadership of Alekos Alavanos. A year earlier, Alavanos had placed 30-year-old Alexis Tsipras on the party’s ticket for municipal elections in Athens to some success. In 2007, Tsipras was elected party leader at the improbable age of 33 and the party’s poll ratings soared as voters appeared encouraged by the leftists’ youthful look. However, this attraction proved fleeting and SYRIZA’s support dropped slightly in the 2009 elections, partly on the back of Tsipras adopting an equivocal stance during the unrest in December 2008 that followed the fatal shooting of a 15-year-old boy in Athens by a police officer. SYRIZA suffered a further blow in 2010, when four experienced MPs quit the party to form a new movement, Democratic Left, due to concerns about positions on a number of issues, most notably Greece’s relationship with the EU. In recent months, SYRIZA, which opposes the terms of the EU-IMF bailout, has seen its poll ratings rise again.

Main campaign points:
Tsipras, who hopes he can lead SYRIZA to third place in the elections, has said he would accept support from the right-wing Independent Greeks if there were a possibility of forming a left-wing government that would oppose the terms of the new bailout. Although fuzzy on the question of keeping the euro, SYRIZA supports Greece's membership of the European Union, but opposes the belt-tightening measures mandated by the memorandum. It proposes sustainable economic policies, it rejects the EU's reformed Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), it envisages the regeneration of workers' cooperatives, and rejects the deregulation of maritime transport. SYRIZA is in favor of abolishing the Dublin II treaty, legalizing all immigrant workers and speeding up the asylum process. The party advocates a change in the voting system and is in favor of a simple proportional representation, which would give all parties seats in Parliament based directly on their share of the vote.

Campaign slogan: They chose without us, we’re moving on without them
2009 election result: 4.60 percent
April 20 opinion poll rating: 13 percent

Ecologist Greens

Founded: 2002
Leader: Six-member committee led by Ioanna Kontouli


Brief history: Unlike some other European Union countries, the Greens have found it difficult to break into the political mainstream in Greece. Their most significant achievements were in 2009 when they won a seat in the European Parliament and more than doubled their support in the national elections despite falling short of entering the Greek Parliament.

Main campaign points:
The Ecologist Greens favor a move to more sustainable development and the creation of jobs through “green growth.” They are calling for more emphasis to be placed on organic farming and sustainable fishing and for Greece to make better use of its renewable energy sources. In terms of economic policy, the Greens favor higher taxation for large incomes and lower taxes for SMEs. They propose lending from the European Central Bank and the issuing of eurobonds as a means of overcoming the debt crisis. Their stance would make them a potential coalition partner for a left-leaning government. The party wants a common immigration and asylum policy for the EU and a revision of the Dublin II treaty. It is in favor of decriminalizing drug use and the cultivation of drugs, particulalry marijuana, for personal use.

Campaign slogan:
Think clearly
2009 election result: 2.53 percent
April 20 opinion poll rating: 3.5 percent

Democratic Left


Founded: 2010
Leader: Fotis Kouvelis


Brief history: Democratic Left was formed when four MPs quit SYRIZA in 2010 to form a more clearly pro-European movement. The party is led by Fotis Kouvelis, who briefly served as justice minister in the past. His mild-mannered approach has proved popular with many voters. Until April 20, Kouvelis was the only party leader with an approval rating of more than 50 percent. The party recently attracted several PASOK MPs who were ousted from the Socialists for voting against the new bailout. Kouvelis has ruled out having a fully fledged role in a coalition government with ND and PASOK but has hinted that Democratic Left might provide support in Parliament if agreement can be reached on certain policies.

Main manifesto points: Democratic Left rejects Greece's bailout deal but is keen on the country's eurozone membership. It advocates finding the 11 billion euros in savings for 2013 and 2014 from alternative sources, such as modest improvements in fighting tax evasion, corruption and cutting public waste. It calls for the introduction of eurobonds and a more active role for the ECB. On the issue of illegal immigration, it wants a revision of Dublin II and the repatriation of undocumented immigrants.

Campaign slogan:
The responsible left
2009 election result: N/A
April 20 opinion poll rating:
9.5 percent

Independent Greeks


Founded: 2012
Leader: Panos Kammenos


Brief history: Independent Greeks is a right-wing nationalist party that was formed by ousted New Democracy MP Panos Kammenos in February. Kammenos, known for his bombastic style, believes that Greece was the victim of an international conspiracy and that the EU-IMF bailouts have allowed its lenders to exploit the country. Kammenos, whose party platform was first unveiled on Facebook, has labeled the politicians who negotiated the bailouts -- especially former Prime Minister George Papandreou -- as “traitors.” He has attracted to his party 10 fellow deputies who were also expelled from ND and has enjoyed a rapid rise in the opinion polls, aided by his effective use of social media. Kammenos has suggested he would be willing to work with leftist SYRIZA -- despite being on different ends of the ideological spectrum -- since both parties oppose the EU-IMF memorandum. Kammenos has already struck cooperation with the tiny leftist party People’s Chariot (Arma Politon).

Main manifesto points: Kammenos has called for the nationalization of the Bank of Greece and the creation of a Greek investment bank that would protect the country’s property from being seized by its lenders. He has said he wants to drive the IMF out of Greece. Kammenos insists the country can cover any funding gap by getting advance payments for the oil and gas reserves which are currently the subject of exploration missions. He has been highly critical of Berlin, seeking payment of German war reparations. Kammenos has vowed to investigate whether Greek officials colluded with speculators to profit from a Greek default. He has had little to say on the migration issue, save sporadic calls for a European response to the problem.

Campaign slogan: We are many, we are independent, we are Greeks
2009 election result: N/A
April 20 opinion poll rating: 11 percent

Chrysi Avgi (Golden Dawn)


Founded: 1993
Leader: Nikos Michaloliakos


Brief history: Party leader Nikos Michaloliakos had been active in far-right politics for a number of years before Chrysi Avgi was officially recognized as a party in 1993. He met with leaders of the 1967-74 military junta while serving a jail sentence for illegal possession of explosives and has said he was “proud” to serve in the same jail wing as the imprisoned colonels. The party expresses open admiration for the 1936-41 dictatorship led by Ioannis Metaxas and associates itself closely with Nazi ideology and imagery, although Michaloliakos insists he is only a nationalist who is fighting the “new world order” and corruption in Greek politics. Chrysi Avgi has advocated vigilantism in the past and party members have been tried for attacks on leftists and immigrants. The party gained its first major electoral breakthrough in the local elections of 2010 when Michaloliakos won a seat on the Athens municipal council. The party has campaigned heavily in parts of central Athens where some residents feel threatened by rising crime and the concentration of undocumented immigrants.

Main campaign points:
Chrysi Avgi is opposed to the EU-IMF loan deal but does not favor an exit from the eurozone at this point. Its main focus has been on calling for the expulsion of all illegal immigrants from Greece. It wants land mines placed on the Greek-Turkish border to stop illegal immigrants entering the country. Michaloliakos told NET TV that he believes second-generation immigrants born in Greece should be allowed to live in Greece but not have the right to vote or stand for office. Michaloliakos says that once his party is in Parliament it will create private security firms to patrol working-class Athens neighborhoods and medical centers to provide treatment to the poor. Chrysi Avgi calls for the cancellation of Greece's bailouts and erasing of any debt accumulated since 1974 that is deemed “illegal and odious.”

Campaign slogan:
So we can rid the land of filth
2009 election result: 0.29 percent
April 20 opinion poll rating: 5.5 percent

Democratic Alliance


Founded: 2010
Leader: Dora Bakoyannis


Brief history: Former Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis was expelled from New Democracy for voting in favor of the first EU-IMF bailout despite instructions from the man that beat her to the party leadership, Antonis Samaras, to the contrary. Bakoyannis set up Democratic Alliance as a liberal centrist party that aimed to be a halfway house between PASOK and ND. Despite attracting some conservative MPs to her party, Bakoyannis has enjoyed extremely limited success with her venture. Democratic Alliance supports an agenda of structural and political reform but voters appear unconvinced that Bakoyannis, an established political figure whose father -- Constantine Mitsotakis -- served as prime minister, can represent the change she espouses.

Main manifesto points:
Democratic Alliance has backed Greece's loan agreements, deeming support as critical for keeping the country in the EU and the eurozone. The party wants a smaller government, with fewer civil servants, and has called for a single 20 percent tax rate for all Greek citizens. It would like to see more privatizations, further deregulations of closed professions, and a new legal framework regarding strikes and the operation of unions. The party says no more migrants should be admitted to the country until 2020, while calling for the immediate processing of all outstanding asylum applications. Bakoyannis supports the reduction of the number of MPs from 300 to 200.

Campaign slogan:
It’s not your fault, it’s the state’s, so change it
2009 election result: N/A
April 20 opinion poll rating: 2 percent

Drasi

Founded: 2009
Leader: Stefanos Manos


Brief history: Founded in 2009 by former Economy Minister Stefanos Manos, the liberal Drasi attracted less than 40,000 votes at the European Parliament elections that year and did not take part in the subsequent legislative elections. Manos started his political career as a New Democracy MP in the 1970s, but after serving in government in the early 1980s and 1990s he attempted to form his own movement. Its lack of success led to Manos later standing for election on the PASOK ticket. Manos, who is the party's only professional politician, was one of the first advocates of a privatization program and has repeatedly called for widespread public sector reform but has found it difficult to make his message resonate with voters. Drasi recently joined forces with the smaller Liberal Alliance, led by gay and human rights activist Grigoris Valianatos.

Main manifesto points: Drasi backs many of the policies in the EU-IMF memorandum, including tighter fiscal discipline, privatizations and state sector layoffs. Manos has proposed the abolition of employer and employee social security fund (IKA) contributions. He supports granting every citizen a pension of 700 euros at the age of 67. Drasi proposes the legalization of drugs and gay marriage, and wants citizenship granted to all foreigners born in the country. It says the school curriculum must be redesigned in a way that does not cultivate a religious and national conscience.

Campaign slogan: We are citizens, not customers
2009 election result: N/A
April 20 opinion poll rating: 1.5 percent

Social Pact


Founded: 2012
Leaders: Louka Katseli & Haris Kastanidis


Brief history: Social Pact was formed in March by two former ministers who were ousted from PASOK for opposing the new bailout. Ex-Economy Minister Louka Katseli and former Justice Minister Haris Kastanidis formed that party to give a voice to disgruntled PASOK supporters but their late start compared to Democratic Left is one of the reasons that Social Pact will struggle to make an impact at the ballot box.

Main campaign points: Social Pact says Greece’s membership of the euro is “not negotiable.” However, it opposes the austerity attached to the country’s bailout programs and has called for measures that support growth and social justice. Kastanidis, a close associate of ex-Prime Minister George Papandreou, insists that the former premier had been right to call a referendum on Greece’s eurozone membership. Kastanidis was one of those who advised Papandreou to propose the idea, which triggered the latter’s downfall.

Campaign slogan: For Greece, in Europe
2009 election result: N/A
April 20 opinion poll rating: N/A

Source: Kathimerini English Edition

 Recreate Greece (Dimiourgia Xana)


Founded: 2012
Leaders: Thanos Tzimeros


Running on a reformist platform, the people running with this party describe themselves  as 'productive people who have never been sustained by state largesse, and who envision a meritocratic and progressive state. We are successful entrepreneurs, corporate executives, professionals, scientists, intellectuals and conscientious public servants who cannot continue to support the parasites within their midst. We are not household names. However, each one of us has built islets of creativity and quality, in his family, his business and in his immediate environment. We know that there are many people in Greece who think and live their lives as we do. And we know that they are many more than it appears. They do not break store windows, they do not scream on television debates, they do not block roads, and they do not occupy buildings. They only feel pain and sorrow. They are the people we represent, the people on whom we rely, and the people we want with us.'

They pledge to do away with cronyism and corruption in the public sector and create a meritocratic state staffed by people qualified and willing to offer their services to the citizens.

Campaign slogan: No to the professionals of politics

2009 election result: N/A
April 20 opinion poll rating: N/A

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Global Greek Events - Greek Elections 2009

Greeks go to the polls this weekend to decide who will run the country for the next few years and in the midst of a global economic crisis.

These elections are probably the first where issues affecting Global Greeks, wherever they may be, have been touched upon, since current Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis announced that his government would bring in legislation to allow ethnic Greeks all over the world to participate in Greece's General Elections.

George Papandreou, leader of PASOK, the Pan-Hellenic Socialist Party, now in Opposition but Greece's next Prime Minister according to the various polls doing the rounds, and a Diaspora Greek himself, spoke to Peter Wilson from the newspaper "The Australian" .

We quote the following from The Australian, today 1 October 2009.

Voting Australians of Greek heritage have been promised a wave of reforms to increase their involvement with their former country by a man who is expected to be elected prime minister of Greece this weekend.

George Papandreou, the opposition leader who enjoys a hefty lead in pre-election opinion polls, said yesterday he planned to improve the recognition of Australian university degrees and change other regulations to make it easier for Greek-Australians to work in the country.

Members of the Greek diaspora would also be allowed, for the first time, to vote in the nation's elections without the expense of travelling to Greece, and any obstacles blocking the quick payment of Greek pensions to thousands of qualified recipients in Australia would be promptly removed, he said.

Mr Papandreou's centre-left party PASOK leads the five-year-old conservative government of Costas Karamanlis in the polls by about 37 per cent to 30 per cent and is strongly tipped to win Sunday's election. The win would break a string of losses for centre-left parties in Europe.

In an exclusive interview with The Australian before an election rally in Thessaloniki last night, Mr Papandreou, 57, said he would encourage skilled members of the Greek diaspora to spend some time working in their former country, which would require withdrawing hurdles such as the need for military service and restrictive hiring rules at government agencies.

"We would have to create a specific law which would give this possibility to open up positions for, let's say, two or three years for experts and advisers to come ... and work here," he said.

While the population of Greece is 11million, there are estimated to be up to 7 million people of Greek descent living abroad. Some 365,000 people told Australia's 2006 census their ancestry within the past two generations was Greek.

One area that has frustrated many of those Australians is Greece's refusal to recognise three-year bachelor degrees awarded by Australian universities as the equivalent of Greek degrees, which take four years.

"No one can deny that Australian universities are high quality universities," said Mr Papandreou, who did his university studies in Sweden, the US and Britain.

"There are obviously countries that give degrees that are much lower quality -- Australia is not one of them.

"Sometimes these procedures are overly bureaucratic and unfair to countries like Australia and of course to the degree holders who have gotten this education. So I think we have to find a more simple way and a more fair way to evaluate and to recognise these degrees."

More than 1 million of Greece's 9.7million registered voters live overseas but current electoral laws require them to travel to Greece to vote in their original electorates -- usually their place of birth.

But Mr Papandreou said he would like to see three to five seats put aside in the 300-seat national parliament for the Greek diaspora, who would be allowed to vote by mail or at consulates.

Prime Minister Karamanlis received an avid response from a large crowd in Sydney in May 2007, when he promised to give all registered voters an absentee ballot.

But such reforms need a two-thirds majority in parliament and PASOK vetoed the move, complaining it allowed consular votes but not postal votes and would have continued to count diaspora votes in existing seats rather than creating special seats as Italy has done.

The fact Mr Karamanlis now rules with only a one-seat majority shows that three to five new "diaspora" seats could prove influential, but Mr Papandreou's system would still give each registered overseas voter less clout than a domestic voter.

To read original article and hear Peter Wilson's full interview with George Papandreou in Thessaloniki for The Australian, Click Here.

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