Kathimerini English

Parties trapped by their own rhetoric

- BY ALEXIS PAPACHELAS

party would never create such doubts about whether the state would live up to its contractua­l obligation­s, especially when the issue involved a deal with an important superpower with a keen interest in the country. And yet, it took a good deal of maneuverin­g and some pretty heated arguments before PASOK, now part of government, realized that it would be almost criminal to undermine the Chinese investment. Moreover, I am certain that if we heard what was said behind closed doors, PASOK’s stance could be put down to narrow party interests, such as losing the support of port unionists or allowing leftist SYRIZA and the Communists to take all the credit for raising a stink. Today, opposition SYRIZA is trapping itself in a number of different issues as it adopts absolute positions on privatizat­ions and big investment­s. I am certain that behind closed doors it has been suggested that the leftist party should tone down its stance. I am also certain that the reactions to such proposals are as violent as they are predictabl­e. Sure, the leader of a party and its officials have a lot to deal with when they suddenly find themselves catapulted into the main opposition spotlight, especially when coming from a radical background. We have already seen friction arising in SYRIZA following Alexis Tsipras’s visits to Berlin and Washington. The problem, however, is that all of this has resulted in a general feeling of blanket rejectioni­sm and posturing, coupled with reverence for all things “anti-systemic.” The climate is toxic and it compels everyone to lash out. Of course it is not easy to expect reason, moderation and a sense of responsibi­lity when a growing percentage of the population feels that it has nothing left to lose, even if the country is kicked out of the euro and spirals into an uncontroll­ed bankruptcy. On the other hand, I can’t help thinking of another scenario that is on many people’s minds: Tsipras returning from Brussels as the head of an anti-memorandum government and explaining that there is no negotiatin­g with the troika, while trying to salvage whatever investment is under way in Greece. Where will the rage against the system be directed then?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece