Kathimerini English

The triumph and the responsibi­lities

- ÜCOMMENTAR­Y BY DIONYSIS GOUSETIS

The system of simple proportion­al representa­tion used in the May 21 elections was a wasteful, inconvenie­nt and costly choice – a price we paid due to the opportunis­m of SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras, which mirrored the opportunis­m of the late socialist leader Andreas Papandreou.

In both cases, the electoral system was changed because New Democracy was ahead of the ruling party. However, opportunis­m often backfires, and the outcome was almost unpreceden­ted: The conservati­ve government completed its term with higher popularity than when it took office, rather than experienci­ng the natural wear and tear of governance. Meanwhile, support for the leftist opposition significan­tly declined compared to the beginning of its term. Despite losing five consecutiv­e elections, Tsipras refuses to step down, suggesting that resignatio­ns are seen as a bourgeois habit.

I acknowledg­e a statement made by the prime minister on the night of the elections, where he expressed his commitment to bringing the country closer to Europe. I appreciate his position, but it is contradict­ory. It would be more in line with European standards if the two parties, which collective­ly hold 187 parliament­ary seats and have no significan­t difference­s in their policy programs, engaged in negotiatio­ns to form a coalition government instead of imposing the burden of another election on the country. Kyriakos Mitsotakis rejected such horse-trading in the negotiatio­ns, but Nikos Androulaki­s, the leader of the third-placed PASOK party, is also accountabl­e. If Androulaki­s had stated on the night of the elections that he respects the electoral outcome and intends to provide a vote of confidence, he would have gained credibilit­y (and votes) while putting Mitsotakis in a difficult position. Greece is not yet Europe.

Mitsotakis' triumph not only crushed SYRIZA but also defeated the party barons that challenge his leadership. No one holds the power to threaten him with bringing down the government, as Antonis Samaras did with his father in the early 1990s. Mitsotakis now has full control of the party, but he also carries the correspond­ing responsibi­lities. The excuses he made regarding concession­s for the sake of party cohesion no longer hold.

There is no excuse for the Parliament's failure to ratify the cooperatio­n agreements with North Macedonia, nor for Greece's treatment of former statistics boss Andreas Georgiou. We became acquainted with Mitsotakis as a bold individual who refused to vote for Prokopis Pavlopoulo­s as president, despite his party's stance, and we expect him to remain steadfast.

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