Kuwait Times

Greece elects first woman president for a ‘new era’

-

ATHENS: Greece’s parliament yesterday elected the first woman president in the country’s history, a senior judge with no party-political allegiance. A cross-party majority of 261 of the 294 MPs present at the session voted in favour of 63-year-old Katerina Sakellarop­oulou, parliament chief Costas Tassoulas said. “Katerina Sakellarop­oulou has been elected president of the republic,” Tassoulas said. “This is a very important day for the Greek republic,” said Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who nominated her for the post. “Parliament has elected a remarkable jurist, a consensus figure who symbolises the transition to a new era.”

The new EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen agreed. Tweeting her congratula­tions to Sakellarop­oulou, she added: “Greece is moving ahead into a new era of equality.” Sakellarop­oulou herself set out her priorities to assembled journalist­s shortly after the vote: the economic crisis, climate change and mass migration, all of which required internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

The new president, until now the head of Greece’s administra­tive court, the Council of State, will be sworn in on March 13, taking over from Prokopis Pavlopoulo­s. The daughter of a Supreme Court judge, Sakellarop­oulou completed postgradua­te studies at Paris’s Sorbonne university. She was the first woman to lead the Council of State, the country’s top administra­tive court. As a jurist, she has particular expertise in environmen­tal and constituti­onal law.

A consensus candidate Although the president is nominally the head of the Greek state and commander-in-chief, the post is largely ceremonial. Greek presidents confirm government­s and laws and technicall­y have the power to declare war, but only in conjunctio­n with the government. Backed by the main opposition leftist Syriza and socialist KINAL parties, Sakellarop­oulou’s candidacy secured one of the highest vote counts in parliament history. Mitsotakis had emphasized that the selection broke with tradition not only because Sakellarop­oulou is a woman, but because she is not a member of a political party. Past presidents have often been senior party figures, such as former ministers. Some commentato­rs have welcomed Sakellarop­oulou’s nomination as a consensus candidate during a difficult time for Greek foreign policy, amid tension with Turkey over energy exploratio­n, Aegean territoria­l rights and migration.

“The time has come for Greece to open up to the future,” Mitsotakis said earlier this month, as he submitted Sakellarop­oulou’s name for the parliament­ary vote. When Mitsotakis became prime minister in July, he was criticised for appointing just a handful of women to his cabinet. A 2017 Eurobarome­ter poll found 63 percent of Greeks thought gender equality had been achieved in politics, 69 percent at work and 61 percent in leadership positions.

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP ?? ATHENS: President of Council of State Katerina Sakellarop­oulou poses for pictures after the result of a parliament vote for the election of the new President of the Greek Republic yesterday.
— AFP ATHENS: President of Council of State Katerina Sakellarop­oulou poses for pictures after the result of a parliament vote for the election of the new President of the Greek Republic yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait