This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jan/25/greece-election-vote-austerity-leftwing-syriza-eu

The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 2 Version 3
Greece elections: outcome may put country on collision course with EU Greece elections: anti-austerity Syriza party enjoys comfortable win
(about 4 hours later)
After five brutal years of austerity and recession, Greeks are voting under clear skies in a high-stakes election that could put their country on a collision course with the European Union. Syriza, the radical leftists who have pledged to roll back austerity and push to cut the country’s mammoth debt burden, have emerged as comfortable winners of the Greek elections, early exit polls suggest.
Looking confident and relaxed, the Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras strode smiling up the steps of a primary school in the Kipseli neighbourhood of Athens to cast his vote in bright mid-morning sunshine. Minutes after polling stations closed at 7pm (5pm GMT) on Sunday, the first exit polls considered reliable indicators, but frequently out by several points put Alexis Tsipras’s party at 36-39% of the vote, between 10 and 12 points clear of the rival incumbent conservatives of New Democracy.
Final opinion polls on Friday showed his radical leftist party, which has pledged to overturn austerity and renegotiate Greece’s debt mountain, holding a comfortable lead of between four and seven percentage points over its main rival, the incumbent New Democracy. The projections suggest Syriza, which would collect a 50-seat bonus for finishing first, could end up with 158 MPs, an outright majority. But the party could also fall just short of the 151 it needs to govern alone: the final percentage of the vote a winning party needs for a majority depends on the share taken by the smaller parties that score below the 3% threshold needed to enter parliament.
Surrounded by a throng of reporters and chanting supporters, Tsipras declared election day to be the “last step of the Greek people towards regaining social cohesion and dignity”. Europe’s future was “not the future of austerity it is the future of democracy, solidarity and cooperation,” he added. The polls suggested seven or eight parties would make it into the new parliament, with the new centrist To Potami party and far-right Golden Dawn apparently locked in a neck-and-neck race for third place between with 6.4% and 8% of the vote respectively. More accurate results are expected later in the evening.
Syriza's Alexis Tsipras heads up the polling station stairs to vote pic.twitter.com/DsMtHWrLLv “This is a historic victory, but we still have to see if it will be a big historic victory,” Syriza spokesman Panos Skourletis said on Mega TV. “It sends a message against austerity and in favour of dignity and democracy,” he said.
His barnstorming alliance of Maoists, Marxists, Trotskyists, Euro-communists, Socialists and Greens looks sure to see off the conservatives of prime minister Antonio Samaras, but they are by no means certain to achieve the 151 seats they need to govern alone. After five brutal years of austerity and recession, Greece’s 9.8m voters went to the polls under clear skies in a high-stakes vote that risked putting their country on a collision course with the European Union.
Initial exit polls, considered a broadly reliable indication of the likely final result, are expected soon after polls close at 7pm (5pm GMT), and a more accurate estimate about two hours later. Looking confident and relaxed, Alexis Tsipras, the 40-year-old Syriza leader who has promised to light an “anti-austerity” fire across Europe, strode smiling up the steps of a primary school in the Kipseli neighbourhood of Athens to cast his vote.
Voting in his home town of Pylos, in the Peloponnese, Samaras said the country would be taking a monumental risk by voting Syriza. “Today we decide if are going forward, or if we are going towards the unknown,” he said. Surrounded by a throng of reporters and chanting supporters, Tsipras declared election day to be the “last step of the Greek people towards the return of hope, the end of fear, the return of dignity in our country”.
Europe’s future was “not the future of austerity – it is the future of democracy, solidarity and cooperation,” he said, adding that a strong vote for Syriza would ensure Greece negotiated “a tough bargain” with Europe.
Voters in Kipseli said the election felt like the most important in Greece’s recent history. “I just voted for the party that’s going to change Greece – in fact, the party that is going to change the whole of Europe,” said Panagiotis, 54, a self-employed electrician.Voters in Kipseli said the election felt like the most important in Greece’s recent history. “I just voted for the party that’s going to change Greece – in fact, the party that is going to change the whole of Europe,” said Panagiotis, 54, a self-employed electrician.
“There has to be change, big change. The economy has collapsed. Poverty has reached proportions … People, ordinary people like you and me, are poking around in dustbins to get food to eat. The young can only find work abroad. Syriza is Greece’s hope.”“There has to be change, big change. The economy has collapsed. Poverty has reached proportions … People, ordinary people like you and me, are poking around in dustbins to get food to eat. The young can only find work abroad. Syriza is Greece’s hope.”
Maria, 78, a lifelong conservative, said she had voted Syriza for the first time because she had “no confidence left in anyone, any party, who has governed us up until now”.Maria, 78, a lifelong conservative, said she had voted Syriza for the first time because she had “no confidence left in anyone, any party, who has governed us up until now”.
She added: “Can Syriza do it? We’ll have to see; things are in a very bad way. But at least they seem to care. My grandson – he’s seven – said to his mother, just now: ‘Vote Tsipras, mummy. He talks about the poor people.’” She added: “Things are in a very bad way here. But at least Syriza seem to care. My grandson – he’s seven – said to his mother, just now: ‘Vote Tsipras, mummy. He talks about the poor people.’”
Dimitra, a 32-year-old bank employee who declined to say for whom she had voted, said something “huge” plainly had to happen in her country. “So much has fallen apart, just stopped working. People are really suffering. But I worry expectations are too high today – no one can fix it alone. The truth is, all of us will have to make it happen.”Dimitra, a 32-year-old bank employee who declined to say for whom she had voted, said something “huge” plainly had to happen in her country. “So much has fallen apart, just stopped working. People are really suffering. But I worry expectations are too high today – no one can fix it alone. The truth is, all of us will have to make it happen.”
As many as seven of the 22 parties standing look set to gain the 3% of the vote needed to enter parliament. But although the winner collects an extra 50-seat bonus, recent polling has suggested that may still not quite be enough to give Syriza an absolute majority in the 300-seat parliament.
Tsipras’s fierce anti-austerity, anti-bailout message has found an enthusiastic audience across a now visibly strung-out and worn-down country. Since 2009, Greece’s GDP has plummeted by a quarter, its household income by more than a third, and joblessness has trebled, to 26%.Tsipras’s fierce anti-austerity, anti-bailout message has found an enthusiastic audience across a now visibly strung-out and worn-down country. Since 2009, Greece’s GDP has plummeted by a quarter, its household income by more than a third, and joblessness has trebled, to 26%.
Swingeing spending cuts and soaring unemployment have seen around 3.1 million people, or a third of the population, lose their social security and health insurance, leaving the country on the brink of humanitarian crisis. Almost third of Greece’s population now lives below the poverty line, while 18% are unable to afford basic food needs. Swingeing spending cuts and soaring unemployment have seen about 3.1 million people, or a third of the population, lose their social security and health insurance, leaving the country on the brink of humanitarian crisis. Almost a third of Greece’s population now lives below the poverty line, while 18% are unable to afford basic food needs.
“For us, hope is not just a campaign slogan,” said Gabriel Sakellaridis, a young Syriza candidate in central Athens. “Hope has been missing from the Greek people through five years of fear, anxiety, despair. Syriza has convinced them we not just that we want to change this, but that we can.”“For us, hope is not just a campaign slogan,” said Gabriel Sakellaridis, a young Syriza candidate in central Athens. “Hope has been missing from the Greek people through five years of fear, anxiety, despair. Syriza has convinced them we not just that we want to change this, but that we can.”
The prospect of a Syriza victory has spooked creditors who worry that Athens will seek a write-off of at least part of its €320bn debt. Some analysts fear that a tough Syriza approach to negotiations could push Greece out of the eurozone, although Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, insisted on Friday that this was not what she wanted. The prospect of a Syriza victory has spooked creditors who worry that Athens will seek a write-off of at least part of its €320bn (£240bn) debt. Some analysts fear that a tough Syriza approach to negotiations could push Greece out of the eurozone, although Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, insisted on Friday that this was not what she wanted.
Tsipras’s line has softened markedly in recent weeks, but several EU capitals are still alarmed by promises to cancel the most draconian budget cuts imposed as part of the country’s €240bn bailout package.Tsipras’s line has softened markedly in recent weeks, but several EU capitals are still alarmed by promises to cancel the most draconian budget cuts imposed as part of the country’s €240bn bailout package.
“We will start with the things we can easily do, that we can afford, but will make a difference,” said Sakellaridis. “We don’t have a magic wand; people know that. But we can take simple steps to restore some social justice: raise the minimum wage and pension, abolish the most unfair new taxes.”“We will start with the things we can easily do, that we can afford, but will make a difference,” said Sakellaridis. “We don’t have a magic wand; people know that. But we can take simple steps to restore some social justice: raise the minimum wage and pension, abolish the most unfair new taxes.”
If the party does need a coalition partner, its choices are limited. The extreme-right, anti-immigrant, Nazi-inspired Golden Dawn, several of whose 18 MPs are in jail awaiting trial for membership of a criminal organisation, may end up as Greece’s third largest party, but is clearly not an option. If the party does need a coalition partner, its choices are limited. The extreme-right, anti-immigrant, Nazi-inspired Golden Dawn, several of whose 18 MPs are in jail awaiting trial for membership of a criminal organisation, is clearly not an option.
The Communist party has refused all cooperation with Syriza. Possible allies could include the new, centrist Potami (River) party, which wants root-and-branch reform of Greece’s dysfunctional state, or the populist Independent Greeks, who agree with Syriza that austerity has to end, but disagree on almost everything else. The Communist party has refused all cooperation with Syriza. Possible allies could include To Potami, which wants root-and-branch reform of Greece’s dysfunctional state, or the populist Independent Greeks, who agree with Syriza that austerity has to end, but disagree on almost everything else.
Syriza's Alexis Tsipras heads up the polling station stairs to vote pic.twitter.com/DsMtHWrLLv