Muscat Daily

Greek president taps judge to lead interim government

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A senior Greek judge, Ioannis Sarmas, was asked on Wednesday to lead an interim government tasked with organising a second national election by late June, the presidency announced.

Faced with ‘the imposibili­ty of forming a government’ just three days after national elections ‘the solution, according to the Constituti­on is the formation of an interim government’, said President Katerina Sakellarop­oulou during a meeting with Sarmas.

She referred to the fact that none of the three parties that led Sunday’s polls was willing to form a coalition government, after failing to secure a majority.

Outgoing Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has called for a fresh election as early as June 25 after securing his party’s biggest electoral triumph in years, but five seats short of being able to produce a single-party govern

ment. “It is a great honour, a constituti­onal obligation and my duty as a citizen to accept this responsibi­lity,” said Sarmas, 66.

Born on the Greek island of Kos, Sarmas followed a career in the courts after studying law in Athens and Paris, as well as completing a doctorate.

He will serve as prime minister until a government is de

clared in the second election.

Sunday’s polls saw Mitsotakis’s conservati­ve New Democracy party securing a 20point lead over its nearest contender, Syriza, led by leftist Alexis Tsipras.

It was the Greek conservati­ves’ best result since 2007, crediting the party with bringing economic stability back to a nation once known as an EU laggard.

Mitsotakis, 55, on Monday told Sakellarop­oulou that he could not form a coalition and called for elections ‘possibly on June 25’.

Tsipras, whose party Syriza won 71 seats for Mitsotakis’s 146, also refused to form a coalition on Tuesday and has vowed to lead his party into the next battle.

Under a new electoral law that comes into play in the next ballot, the winner can obtain a bonus of up to 50 seats.

Based on Sunday’s showing and that calculatio­n, New Democracy is virtually assured of a victory.

In power over the last four years, former Mckinsey consultant Mitsotakis steered the country through the pandemic which devastated Greece’s vital tourism industry.

Mitsotakis’ term was blighted, however, by a wiretappin­g scandal as well as a train crash that killed 57 people in February.

The government initially blamed the accident - Greece’s worst-ever rail disaster - on human error, even though the country’s notoriousl­y poor rail network has suffered from years of under-investment.

Neverthele­ss, neither the accident nor the wiretappin­g scandal appeared to have dented support for his conservati­ves - who scored a far bigger win than that predicted by opinion polls ahead of the vote.

In contrast, Tsipras’ Syriza finished second even in his ancestral village in Arta, northweste­rn Greece.

For his part, Tsipras said he takes ‘full responsibi­lity’ for the defeat, which he called a ‘painful shock’, while vowing to prevent the formation of a right-wing government in the next round.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Senior Greek judge Ioannis Sarmas during his meeting with the Greek President in Athens on Wednesday
(AFP) Senior Greek judge Ioannis Sarmas during his meeting with the Greek President in Athens on Wednesday

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