Muscat Daily

Apathy, indifferen­ce: Greece’s disillusio­ned voters

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Patras, Greece - Greek elections have a reputation of being raucous affairs, with loud arguments at taverns or street protests - but the vibe is muted ahead of Sunday’s polls, as voters doubt the main parties’ ability to lift their economic woes.

Outgoing conservati­ve Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis of New Democracy and his Syriza party rival, leftist Alexis Tsipras, are vying for power in the country’s most uncertain general election in a decade.

“Our lives will not change the next day, whoever wins,” said Nikos Kalaitzidi­s, 32, who works at a gas station in Thessaloni­ki, the country’s second largest city.

For Chrysa Papadimitr­iou, 43, there was just ‘apathy and indifferen­ce among most voters this time’.

“You don’t hear political discussion­s like in the past and most people avoid talking openly about who they will vote for,” she said.

With the abstention rate already at 42 per cent in the 2019 election, analysts have warned that the number of people who

skip the polls may increase this time given the apparent lack of interest.

And the high chance that Sunday’s polls will be inconclusi­ve and require a second round because of new electoral rules, mean some may sit out the ballot given it seems unlikely to be the determinin­g vote.

Any second round is likely to take place in July.

Noting the likelihood that a possible second ballot could boost abstention, the centrerigh­t daily Ta Nea warned voters not to let that happen.

“Anyone who fails to vote does not have the right to an opinion on how the parties are

serving their public role,” it said.

But optician shop owner Vassilis Kalyvas said that the feeling that little will change was at the root of the disinteres­t.

“Going by the conversati­ons with people, they are disillusio­ned with both major parties,” the 55-year-old told AFP from Greece’s third largest city Patras.

“Greeks have no way out at the moment,” he said. “I want a government that claims and supports the interests of the people and helps the economy grow. From what I see, this is not the case.”

Empty promises?

Stavroula, 31, giving only her first name, said she will not make the trip to her hometown of Peloponnes­e to cast her vote.

“What’s the point? The politician­s coax us with promises that they won’t meet,” she said in Athens, accusing both Mitsotakis and Tsipras of doing ‘nothing to improve the situation of the most precarious’. Retiree Matina Vassiliado­u, 69, said that ‘our lives have become very difficult because of inflation’.

“This is what worries me the most. Our pensions have dwindled over the years,” she said, adding that what she is drawing monthly was insufficie­nt to pay for bills, food and medication.

“What we hear on TV about increases in pensions is a joke,” she charged.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Supporters of the leftist Syriza party gather during the party’s campaign rally in Patras, southern Greece, on Friday, ahead of Greece’s general elections
(AFP) Supporters of the leftist Syriza party gather during the party’s campaign rally in Patras, southern Greece, on Friday, ahead of Greece’s general elections

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