Kathimerini English

A depressing picture

- BY ANGELOS STANGOS

The findings of two public opinion polls published in as many days are depressing for those who believe that the coalition of leftist SYRIZA with rightwing Independen­t Greeks is problemati­c and damaging for the country. One was by Metron Analysis for Vima’s Sunday edition and the other was by Alco for Monday’s Ethnos, and both found that the distance between conservati­ve New Democracy and ruling SYRIZA is shrinking. However, answers regarding the name talks with the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and the Novartis affair also confirmed a pattern exposed by the 2015 referendum over whether Greece should sign a new bailout in order to stay in the eurozone – where 61.3 percent voted “No” and 38.7 percent “Yes.” The answers revealed aspects of the Greek mentality that will prevent the country from adapting to the modern world unless it changes. Skeptics will argue that public opinion polls are nothing more than a snapshot of the moment during which they are conducted and not indicative of actual outcomes. This is pure sophistry used by pollsters against the likelihood of their projection­s being proved false. Judging by the answers in this case, both polls show that the coalition partners continue to be skilled at gauging public opinion. On the one hand, the Metron Analysis survey sees the government gaining from the Novartis case despite its apparent manipulati­on of the affair and losing on the name talks, where it has adopted a reasonable attitude. In the Alco poll, on the other, the majority of respondent­s applaud the government’s handling of the Novartis case and basically believe the politician­s named in the prosecutor­s’ report are guilty. These findings are not surprising. This writer has repeatedly stressed the value of the referendum outcome, which remains relatively unchanged today if interprete­d as indicating voter intention. So, encouraged by the outcome of these polls and others that may not have been made public, the government will continue to persist with its policy of extreme division, mudslingin­g and clientelis­m, disregardi­ng the fact that this will only strengthen

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