Kathimerini English

Society is changing

- BY ALEXIS PAPACHELAS

Greece turned a page yesterday. Beyond New Democracy’s resounding victory, which is due mainly to Kyriakos Mitsotakis, two big circles came to a close with Sunday’s election: the Metapolite­fsi and Greece’s bankruptcy. The political process that began with the restoratio­n of democracy after the 1967-74 junta can be regarded as having come to a close with the sound rejection of the narrative that has dominated, with few exceptions, for decades. SYRIZA’s strategic defeat points to the end of specific ideologica­l taboos. Citizens voted for the person who can get the job done, beyond political ideologies and theories. They are not interested in charisma or the reincarnat­ion of Andreas Papandreou. At the same time, we saw traditiona­l party lines being snuffed out. What represents the “real ND” is a question that only concerns a tiny majority. The doomsayers who saw center-right voters staying at home or casting their ballots for farright parties were disproved. It was also the first time that we saw so many center-leftists, leftists, ex-PASOK supporters and members of all sorts of political tribes voting ND. Some did so half-heartedly, but they did so. Many also expected young voters to disprove the public opinion polls and increase SYRIZA’s share. This didn’t happen either. The “Tik-Tok generation” voted in much the same way as everyone else.

Yesterday’s result also shows that the left’s ascent to power and SYRIZA’s boost may just have been a parenthesi­s. The leftist opposition party was basically the product of anger. Its leader, Alexis Tsipras, responded to a historic imperative and rode the wave of public frustratio­n, bolstering his party along the way. The climate today is completely different, however. Nature despises a vacuum and the race for who will dominate the opposition, and possibly ascend to power, is now really on.

History has handed Mitsotakis an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y. What he has accomplish­ed is, indeed, impressive. He was underestim­ated, won the leadership as an outsider, beat Tsipras in an atmosphere of widespread fear that this was impossible, made some fatal mistakes, came back from them, was underestim­ated again and then managed to win again, with an incredible margin.

Now he will be called up to challenge another prevalent axiom: that the second term of every prime minister is worse than the first. He has no rivals, not inside or outside his party. He’s looking at a solid two years of growth ahead. He knows exactly what is needed to change in this country. It is a historic and unpreceden­ted opportunit­y. His biggest enemy could well be the lack of humility that often comes after a triumph, especially when there’s no one on the other side of the court. Neverthele­ss, what happened yesterday was much greater than the personalit­ies involved. It signaled the defeat of the miserably naysayers who despise change and progress. A critical mass of voters declared that it is ready for great change and turned its back on the mentality of opposing anything that upsets the status quo. Society is changing – and anyone who doesn’t understand that will be left behind.

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