The Jerusalem Post

Domestic politics don’t affect friendship

- • By GEORGE N. TZOGOPOULO­S The writer is a research associate at BarIlan University’s Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, a lecturer at the European Institute of Nice and a senior fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European & Foreign Policy (ELI

Greek citizens will go to the polls on may 21 to vote for a new government. Following almost four years of an administra­tion led by the conservati­ve new democracy party, the political landscape seems rather blurred. the current electoral law is based on proportion­al representa­tion. although not impossible, it will be unlikely for a coalition government to be formed after the forthcomin­g parliament­ary election under these terms.

a failure to do so will lead to a second round expected to take place in july. the fundamenta­l difference is that this second round will be organized with another electoral law. Instead of a proportion­al representa­tion, the winner will then benefit from a bonus of parliament­ary seats that will somewhat increase analogical­ly to its percentage.

surveys suggest that new democracy will win the first election. It is hard and perhaps risky to engage in prognostic­s, however. scenarios of different coalition government­s are being debated with or without new democracy in the core. even after a second election, the winner will probably need a partner to secure a majority in parliament.

more importantl­y, Greece is currently suffering from the trauma caused by a train crash that killed 57 people last march, most of them youngsters returning home after a long holiday weekend. Whether anger over this tragedy will motivate young Greeks to abandon their usual preference for abstention, and show up to vote in favor of every type of opposition party, remains to be seen. such a developmen­t will possibly challenge the methodolog­y of pollsters.

the economy has been diachronic­ally the most important theme of concern for the majority of Greeks. after several tough bailout years, some stabilizat­ion signs are evident. In spite of CoVId-19, Greece is returning to some normalcy. of course, problems remain serious.

reCent data from the Finance ministry shows a debt increase of 12 billion euros in 2022. national debt skyrockete­d thus for the first time to over 400 billion euros. also, high inflation and prices – partly caused by the conflict in ukraine – stymie the efforts of ordinary households to cover daily expenses as salaries are being reduced and taxation costs are growing.

an april oeCd study outlines the disappoint­ing trends. the governing new democracy bears responsibi­lity for the situation but opposition parties arguably offer reliable alternativ­es. no spectacula­r economic changes are expected, irrespecti­ve of the result.

Greece’s pre-election period is marked by a toxic atmosphere whereby politician­s loudly disagree in the hope of rallying their parties’ supporters. undecided voters and centrist citizens are allegedly becoming wiser by following this campaign and are naturally pondering whether a small degree of political compromise is needed to prevent instabilit­y the day after.

notwithsta­nding these rather typical characteri­stics of domestic politics in a mediterran­ean country, Greece’s foreign policy has not been subject to populistic rhetoric. Within this context, the Greek-Israeli partnershi­p is generally considered to be an uncontesta­ble achievemen­t. the three main parties, which will – in one way or another – form the new Greek government, namely new democracy, the leftist syrIZa and the social-democratic pasoK, agree on the matter.

prime minister Kyriakos mitsotakis is a traditiona­l friend of Israel as his father, Constantin­os, made the decision to establish diplomatic relations with the jewish state in 1990. the leader of syrIZa and former premier alexis tsipras surprised many during his 2015-2019 administra­tion, when he brought the bilateral relationsh­ip to new heights, despite the leftist ideology of his party. and nikos androulaki­s, the chief of pasoK, a promising, young politician and former member of the european parliament, did not forget the work of his predecesso­r, George papandreou, who was the first – along with Israeli prime minister Benjamin netanyahu – to believe in the dynamism of the then-emerging Greek-Israeli friendship back in 2010.

this is how athens and jerusalem have managed to work together since then – regardless of the personalit­ies of the leaders or the political spectrum of government­s.

Continuity matters in foreign policy, and domestic politics have little impact on strategic choices. another country, the republic of Cyprus, is employing the same approach. new president nikos Christodou­lides, who advanced Cypriot-Israeli relations while serving as foreign minister in the previous government of nikos anastasiad­es, is now accelerati­ng efforts in this direction.

a few days ago, he was received by netanyahu in jerusalem to foster bilateral cooperatio­n in the eastern mediterran­ean. Government­s may change, but commitment to relations with Israel stays rock solid.

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