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Mitsotakis favourite as Greece heads to uncertain polls

The outgoing prime minister has urged voters not to squander hard-fought economic stability

- AFP

Greece voted yesterday in a general election that could deliver a chaotic outcome, with the leading candidate, conservati­ve Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, unlikely to garner a lead wide enough to avoid a new vote.

Polling stations opened at 7:00am (0400 GMT) and were expected to close at 7:00pm (1600 GMT).

The EU country went into the polls in fairly robust economic health, with unemployme­nt and inflation falling and growth this year projected to reach twice that of the bloc – a far cry from the throes of a crippling debt crisis a decade ago.

But economic issues remain squarely in focus even though a post-covid tourism revival helped Greece book growth of 5.9 per cent in 2022.

The outgoing prime minister has urged voters not to squander hardfought economic stability.

But his key opponent, the former leftist premier Alexis Tsipras, has warned that the rosy hardline figures belie growing poverty as wages fail to keep pace with rising prices.

Tsipras is seeking a comeback after a first mandate in 2015 to 2019, during which he led rocky negotiatio­ns with creditors that nearly crashed Greece out of the euro.

Close to 10 million Greeks are eligible to cast a ballot, including 440,000 first-time voters.

Opinion polls suggest that Mitsotakis enjoys a clear lead of five to seven percentage points.

But the likely outcome of the vote is unpredicta­ble, as changes to the electoral rules mean that no party is expected to obtain an outright majority.

Whether the party that tops the polls would seek a coalition or turn to another round of votes by early July to determine who governs Greece could depend on the size of the lead it amasses.

That could spell weeks of horsetradi­ng, with the socialist party Pasok-kinal, led by 44-year-old Nikos Androulaki­s, a potential kingmaker.

'A new Greece'

Yesterday's vote marks the second national elections in which Mitsotakis, 55, a Harvard graduate and former Mckinsey consultant, is pitted against Tsipras, a 48-yearold former communist and trained engineer.

The outgoing premier says he has delivered on his previous electoral promises of lower taxes, tougher immigratio­n rules and steady growth.

"We will continue with building a new Greece," Mitsotakis vowed at his last rally on Friday before a campaignin­g blackout until polls open at 7:00am yesterday.

But Tsipras has accused Mitsotakis of promising "better jobs and wages, only to have the middle class live on coupons".

Cost of living and employment issues occupy many voters' minds.

"Life, especially for young people, is very difficult. Unemployme­nt is high, there are no work prospects and salaries vanish at the end of the month," said Athens resident Dora Vasilopoul­o, 41.

In Greece's second-biggest city Thessaloni­ki, Giorgos Antonopoul­os, 39, who works at a commercial store, said: "Salaries are used up halfway through the month and nothing is done to address this issue.

"We work just to survive."

But Nadia Aggelopoul­ou, 47, a civil servant, said she believed that Mitsotakis was "doing what he can" to fight inflation.

His government "has been excellent on all levels," she said, adding: "We don't hear lies. We're expecting salary hikes."

'Disturbing'

But ahead of the vote, Mitsotakis' government has come under pressure over the devastatin­g head-on train collision in February that claimed 57 lives.

The government had initially blamed the accident on human error, even though Greece's notoriousl­y poor rail network had been suffering from years of under-investment.

The prime minister's tough stance against immigratio­n also came under the spotlight as The New York Times this week published footage allegedly showing Greek coastguard­s expelling migrants by setting them adrift in the Aegean Sea.

The images were described as "disturbing" by the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights, who also urged an independen­t inquiry.

A wiretap scandal that forced the resignatio­ns of the head of the intelligen­ce service and a nephew of Mitsotakis, who was a top aide in his office, could also have an impact on the election outcome.

Androulaki­s, the Pasol-kinal leader, had been seen as a potential coalition partner for Mitsotakis but chances for cooperatio­n plunged when he discovered he had been under state surveillan­ce.

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