Oman Daily Observer

Embattled Tsipras seeks to steady ship after tragedy

- JOHN HADOULIS

The summer was meant to have been a chance for Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to bask in the success of Greece finally turning the page on the bailout era. But the wildfires outside the capital Athens that killed nearly one hundred people also laid waste to a hoped-for political rebound ahead of elections due next year. As recently as June, Tsipras was tapping into a sense of optimism about Greece putting behind it nearly a decade of economic crisis as its third internatio­nal bailout ends on August 20.

“Day by day, uncertaint­y will be replaced by stability. Danger will be replaced by security and safety,” a beaming Tsipras told political allies and friends at a reception at the majestic Zappeio pavilion in Athens.

But within a month, jubilation came crashing down as scores died in wildfires near Athens, torching both Tsipras’ boyish appeal and possibly his government’s legacy too.

“(This) is the most difficult moment from the time we took over the government,” Tsipras’ Telecoms Minister and close adviser Nikos Pappas acknowledg­ed earlier this month.

Anger at Greece’s deadliest fire disaster has mixed with disbelief as a combinatio­n of tactical errors by the fire brigade and police on July 23 trapped hundreds of vacationer­s at the coastal resort of Mati near the capital.

The blow came just as Tsipras was trying to bounce back from months of poor ratings.

While polls have not always proved reliable in recent electoral contests, Tsipras’ Syriza party was trailing the conservati­ve New Democracy party by up to 14 points even before the fire tragedy.

Tsipras’ “government is worn out, it is morally discredite­d and its managerial shortcomin­gs have been exposed,” says Thanassis Diamantopo­ulos, politics professor at Panteion University in Athens.

“I think we’re reaching the point where people who were kind of middleof-the-road and had an open mind are very angry with Syriza now,” added Nikos Konstandar­as, a veteran columnist for liberal daily Kathimerin­i.

“And I think you’re going to be getting a lot of people saying ‘anybody but them, let’s get them out,” Konstandar­as said. The opposition has also stepped up its attacks on Tsipras.

“It’s time for him to go,” New Democracy leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis told the Athens Voice portal earlier this month. But elections are not due until September 2019, although Tsipras could call them early, possibly to coincide with European and local elections in May.

But the government might not last that long in office.

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