The upcoming election
is June for Greece ’s
legislature and Prime Minister has two themes. The first is that the election is a
referendum on the austerity program imposed on Greece
by Europe, (mostly Germany )
in return for hundreds of billions of Euro’s of bailout money. The second aspect of the election is that it
is a referendum on whether or not Greeks want to stay in the European Union and
continue with the Euro as the country’s currency.
Unfortunately for Greece a vote
one way is a vote against the other way.
What Greece
would like is to modify the austerity package so that it does not produce
economic disaster and the remain in the Euro since leaving it would produce economic
disaster. But voting for the Syriza
party that is committed to disavowing the austerity program is also seen as a
vote to leave the Euro. Voting for New
Democracy (center/right) or Pasok (center/left) is a vote to continue in the
Euro but also a vote to sustain the austerity program.
A further
complication is that the Greek parliament, which will choose the Prime
Minister awards 50 bonus seats to the party that finishes first. So if New Democracy can win the largest percentage
of votes and if Pasok can win enough votes so that combined with New Democracy
the two parties would have a majority in the parliament, Greece will
have voted to stay in the Euro. That is
what the
polls show at this time.
Several opinion polls
over the weekend showed support for the conservative New Democracy party
climbing to 23% to 24%, up from its dismal 18.9% result in Greece's May 6
elections, which failed to produce a viable governing majority and forced the
repeat elections next month. Some polls suggest that New Democracy could yet
win a majority in Parliament when its votes are combined with center-left
coalition partners the Socialists, known as Pasok, who are also edging up in
opinion polls compared with their 13.2% result in the May 6 election.
So how will it turn out? We don’t know, that’s why they have
elections. But if New Democracy/Pasok do have a narrow victory some good may come of all of this. Greeks will have voted to stay in the Euro, but they will also have sent a message to Europe that they can only be pushed so far. And Europe in a spate of relief may decide to put pro-growth policies in place in Greece to ameliorate some of the disaster their austerity program is creating. All in all, not a good outcome, but maybe the best that can be achieved.
So voting for the austerity parties will show everyone that Greeks "can only be pushed so far." Reminds me of Saturday Night Live's take on Baby Doc's fleeing Haiti: "a corrupt family can hold us down for no more than 29 years!"
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