Kathimerini English

A video and a tape

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The TV ad showing a journalist being showered in money is only an offense to the already blighted honor of Greek journalism, they said.

The argument – and particular­ly the hurt tone in which it was made – exposes the media to the accusation that its only objection to the ad released by the main opposition SYRIZA party was that it hurt its ego.

After all, isn’t that what “everyone” believes? That all journalist­s are on the take? That this is what the government pays them for? To silence the opposition.

Such opinions resonate with a much wider audience than SYRIZA voters, an audience that probably did not read the two editorials published by Kathimerin­i recently asking why the center-right government has not been forthcomin­g about how it distribute­d the 20 million euros for its coronaviru­s public awareness campaign.

But if there is any good reason to discuss the opposition’s ad, it is not because it offends journalist­s. It is because it demonstrat­es that the party which governed the country for four-and-a-half years is trying to make a comeback by unearthing its “adolescent” anti-systemic cliches.

The timing of the ad, however, was ruthless, coming as it did hot on the heels of revelation­s concerning the tactics employed by the SYRIZA-Independen­t Greeks coalition to entrench its hold on power against its political rivals.

The media and the justice system were the levers of a political ideology limited to vilificati­on of the kind that flourished in the Metapolite­fsi: Everyone is a thief, or a blackguard or a snitch.

This toxic political culture, which is revealed in all its cynical glory in the tapes released by businessma­n Sabby Mionis of his conversati­on with former leftist minister Nikos Pappas, survives in the ranks of SYRIZA today. It is the same culture reflected in the controvers­ial TV ad.

This is a political party that used up much of its capital – and to a great extent succeeded – in changing the media map; that used judicial harassment, threats, examining committees, but also generous subsidies, to build up and demolish media outlets (or “shops,” as they’re colloquial­ly known); that ended its term in a much friendlier media environmen­t that where it started, yet still managed to lose the election.

It should have known better. It should have managed to strike a balance in its relationsh­ip with the press rather than succumbing to the same old conspirato­rial fixations.

The Mionis tapes are like a second act to the TV ad, particular­ly given that the minister heard on the tapes is the same one that was tasked with controllin­g the media landscape.

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