Miami Herald

Pro-bailout party wins Greek election

- BY DEMETRIS NELLAS AND ELENA BECATOROS

BERLIN — Fears of an imminent Greek exit from Europe’s joint currency receded Sunday after the conservati­ve New Democracy came first in critical elections and pro-bailout parties won enough Parliament­ary seats to form a joint government.

As central banks stood ready to intervene in case of financial turmoil, Greece held its second national election in six weeks after an inconclusi­ve ballot on May 6.

With one party advocating ripping up Greece’s multi-billion euro bailout deal, the election was seen as a vote on whether Greece should stay in the 17-nation joint euro currency. A Greek exit would have had potentiall­y catastroph­ic consequenc­es for other ailing European nations, the United States and the entire global economy.

With 82.5 percent of the vote counted, official results showed the conservati­ve New Democracy winning 30 percent and 130 of the 300 seats in Parliament. The radical anti-bailout Syriza party had 26.6 percent and 71 seats and the pro-bailout Socialist PASOK party came in third with 12.5 percent of the vote and 33 seats.

The anti-immigrant nationalis­t Golden Dawn party had 6.9 percent and 18 seats, while the Democratic left won 6.1 percent and 18 seats.

The parties have starkly different views about what to do about the ¤240 billion ($300 billion) in bailout loans that Greece has been given by internatio­nal lenders, and the harsh austerity measures that previous Greek government­s had to accept to get the funds.

New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras cast Sunday’s choice as one between keeping the euro and

returning to Greece’s old currency, the drachma. He has vowed to renegotiat­e some of the bailout’s harsher terms but insists the top priority is for the country to remain in Europe’s joint currency.

“The Greek people today voted for Greece to remain on its European path and in the eurozone,” Samaras said after his party won. “[Voters chose] policies that will bring jobs, growth, justice and security.”

Syriza chief Alexis Tsipras, who had tapped into a vein of deep anger over the plunging living standards faced by many Greeks, had wanted to rip up Greece’s internatio­nal bailout deals and roll back the new taxes, job cuts and pension cuts imposed in the last two years.

That plan will have to wait, since the party that comes in first — New Democracy — gets the first stab at forming a new majority in Parliament. If they fail, the next highest party gets to try.

Tsipras congratula­ted Samaras and conceded the election.

The head of Greece’s socialist PASOK party, meanwhile, proposed that a unity government be formed of four top parties, including Syriza despite its anti-bailout views.

PASOK’s Evangelos Venizelos, who spent months negotiatin­g bailouts as Greece’s finance minister, suggested dumping the usual procedure of each party seeking coalition partners. He said a government must be formed quickly and suggested one between New Democracy, Syriza, PASOK and the small Democratic Left.

“There is not one day to lose. There is no room for party games. If we want Greece to really remain in the euro and get out of the crisis to the benefit of every Greek government, it must have a government tomorrow,” Venizelos said after results were announced.

Germany’s finance minister welcomed the New Democracy party’s victory as a decision to “forge ahead” with implementi­ng farreachin­g reforms. Germany’s foreign minister said it was important for Greece to stick to its agreements with creditors, but held out the prospect that Athens might be given more time to comply with them.

Germany — Europe’s biggest economy — has been a major contributo­r to Greece’s 2 multibilli­oneuro rescue packages and a key advocate of demanding tough, and highly unpopular, austerity and reform measures in exchange.

Greece has been dependent on rescue loans since May 2010, after it was locked out of the internatio­nal markets following years of profligate spending and falsifying financial data.

The spending cuts made in return for the bailout loans have left the country mired in a fifth year of recession, with unemployme­nt spiraling above 22 percent and tens of thousands of businesses shutting down.

The austerity measures have included deep spending cuts on everything from health care to education and infrastruc­ture, as well as tax hikes and reductions of salaries and pensions. They have provoked near-daily strikes and protests, many of which have turned violent on the streets of the capital.

 ?? ANDREAS SOLARO/AFP-GETTY IMAGES ?? New Democracy party leader, Antonis Samaras, arrives for a press conference in Athens.
ANDREAS SOLARO/AFP-GETTY IMAGES New Democracy party leader, Antonis Samaras, arrives for a press conference in Athens.

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