Kathimerini English

The simplest solution for Kasidiaris’ party

ÜC OMMENTARY

- | BY NIKOS ALIVIZATOS * * Nikos Alivizatos is emeritus professor of law at the Faculty of Law of the University of Athens.

the Greek government and main opposition SYRIZA have submitted their proposals for blocking Ellines – the party formed by Ilias Kasidiaris, a former top official of neo-Nazi Golden Dawn convicted of directing a criminal organizati­on – from running in the upcoming general elections.

A common feature of both proposals is that they would allow the Supreme Court to exclude from the elections not only parties that include as members people convicted – even at first instance – of running or participat­ing in a criminal organizati­on, but also any party whose organizati­on and actions do not “serve the free functionin­g of democratic government” (as stated in Article 29, Paragraph 1 of the Greek Constituti­on).

The most important difference between the two proposals lies in the fact that SYRIZA’s plan stipulates that for a party to be excluded, it should also necessaril­y meet the criterion of racist and/or Nazi speech, while New Democracy’s proposal leaves the matter undefined.

The advantage of assigning the abovementi­oned decision to the Supreme Court is obvious: In the future, it will be possible to exclude not only the party of Kasidiaris, but also any party fronted by Kasidiaris’ straw men. This is an advantage that would not be achieved if the amendment was limited to excluding parties with convicted individual­s in their list.

However, the disadvanta­ge of both proposals is in my opinion infinitely more important: They would allow the Supreme Court to be able to exclude from the elections even innocent political groupings, without citing any serious evidence. It would be enough for a police or intelligen­ce report to describe those parties as “subversive,” or even “racist” or “pro-Nazi,” according to SYRIZA’s proposal.

Under what criteria would the First Section of the Supreme Court, under suffocatin­g time pressure, exclude, let’s say, “Silver Dawn” from the elections, whose statute would state that it would respect the Constituti­on, and not a party like the Communist Party of Greece, whose statute still states that it seeks to impose “a dictatorsh­ip of the proletaria­t”?

Even the criterion of the use of violence, which could be cited to ban a party, is in my opinion dangerous if it is not preceded by a judicial ruling. In other words, in order to prevent mistakes that may prove fatal, the proposals must exclude any cri

teria that would leave room for the Supreme Court to assess whether a political grouping will be allowed to participat­e in the elections.

Based on the above rationale, let me insist on the simplest possible solution: When the Supreme Court announces which parties will run, it should limit itself to declaring that the two legal conditions provided for today (Greek citizenshi­p and a minimum age of the candidates) are met, and simply add a third – i.e. a non-conviction, even at a first instance court, of directing or participat­ing in a criminal organizati­on (Articles 187 and 187A of the Penal Code).

It would then be sufficient to replace the sentence “The president, the general secretary, the members of the governing committee and the legal representa­tive have not been convicted...” found in case b) of Paragraph 1 of Article 32 of the current electoral law (26/2012) by the words “any parliament­ary candidate who has not been convicted...”

To prevent mistakes that may prove fatal, proposals must exclude any criteria that would allow the Supreme Court to assess whether a party will participat­e in the elections

 ?? ?? Former Golden Dawn lawmaker Ilias Kasidiaris is seen in court on December 14, 2022, where the appeal trial against the conviction­s of leaders and members of the now-defunct neo-Nazi party for a series of criminal activities continues.
Former Golden Dawn lawmaker Ilias Kasidiaris is seen in court on December 14, 2022, where the appeal trial against the conviction­s of leaders and members of the now-defunct neo-Nazi party for a series of criminal activities continues.

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