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Greek PM’s austerity gamble sows deep divisions in Syriza

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Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has won a difficult gamble in convincing the Greek parliament to agree to tough reforms demanded by Greece's creditors, but he is paying the price of deep splits within his radical-leftist Syriza party.

Tsipras won a solid 230 votes out of the 298 lawmakers who fiercely debated Greece's bailout-for-reforms deal into the early hours of Thursday -- proof of "a large consensus", according to Dimitris Sotiropoulos, a political science professor at Athens University.

But it was the second vote in a week that has seen the 40-year-old premier suffer a serious mutiny within his own party over his plans to secure a bailout of up to 86 billion euros ($96 billion) over three years, in exchange for more of the kind of austerity that Syriza came to power promising to end.

Last week, 39 of Syriza's 149 MPs voted against or abstained on a first wave of reforms that had to pass in order for the bailout talks to go ahead, including widespread tax hikes. Outside the parliament, angry protesters lobbed petrol bombs at police guarding the building.

Prime Minister Tsipras won a solid 230 votes out of the 298 lawmakers who fiercely debated Greece&ap...
Prime Minister Tsipras won a solid 230 votes out of the 298 lawmakers who fiercely debated Greece's bailout-for-reforms deal into the early hours of Thursday
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP/File

Tsipras managed to trim the rebellion to 36 'no' votes and abstentions when a second bill on the reforms went to parliament on Wednesday night -- but as with last week's vote, he was forced to rely on the opposition to get it through.

"His gamble paid off thanks to help from three opposition parties -- the right-wing New Democracy, the socialists from Pasok and the centre-left party To Potami," said Sotiropoulos.

The academic estimated that Tsipras has lost the support of around 40 percent of Syriza's rank-and-file members and a quarter of his MPs, hailing from the "left platform" and other hostile factions that are staunchly opposed to more austerity and, in some cases, continuing Greek membership of the euro.

- A break with the rebels? -

Tsipras has not had an easy few weeks. In a referendum on July 5, Greeks emphatically voted against further austerity -- urged on by the prime minister himself.

A man holds a sign which reads
A man holds a sign which reads "No" for the vote in the Greek referendum, as he celebrates at Syntagma Square in Athens on July 5, 2015
Andreas Solaro, AFP/File

Days later, determined to stop Greece defaulting on its debts and hurtling out of the eurozone into the unknown, he agreed to reforms similar to those voters had just rejected, sparking accusations that he had caved to "blackmail" from the creditors.

In managing to convince a parliament with deep misgivings to approve the measures, Tsipras has scored a victory in the short-term, said Manos Papazoglou, political sciences professor at the University of Peloponnese.

"But in the long term there will be problems," he told AFP.

"The tradition in Greece is to have strong parliamentary majorities and in this case, his party has suffered a major divide," said Papazoglou.

Thursday's vote placed Tsipras in the unenviable position of running what is not just a coalition government, but one that is effectively a minority administration.

A protester clashes with riot police in front of the Greek Parliament in Athens on July 15  2015
A protester clashes with riot police in front of the Greek Parliament in Athens on July 15, 2015
Angelos Tzortzinis, AFP/File

Out of 300 MPs in parliament, he counted the support of just 126 coalition MPs -- 113 from Syriza and 13 from their junior partners, the nationalist Independent Greeks.

A minority government "would have difficulty passing laws in future without forging a political agreement with other parties," said Sotiropoulos.

Government spokeswoman Olga Gerovassili admitted the result of Thursday's voted pointed to a "clear divide" in the party and said "planned procedures" would be implemented to address it.

Tsipras has stressed that his current priority is to finalise the bailout deal. Both sides are under huge pressure to get the agreement hammered out before August 20, when Athens owes the European Central Bank a loan repayment of 3.2 billion euros it cannot afford.

But many analysts believe the prime minister will be forced to call early elections in a country that badly needs stability as it battles to stave off economic collapse.

"Elections would have negative repercussions for both the economy and the political sphere," said Penelope Fountedaki, a law professor based at Pantion University.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (R) and Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos react during a parlia...
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (R) and Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos react during a parliament session in Athens on July 15, 2015
Aris Messinis, AFP/File

After Tsipras finally reached a symbolic consensus in parliament for the bailout deal, fresh elections could deepen divisions within the electorate, she said.

Tsipras's best bet, she argued, is to "break with the dissidents at the heart of his party and go forward with other parties".

Despite the troubles in his ranks, the youthful prime minister is riding high in the opinion polls, which show him overwhelmingly regarded as the best man to be running Greece at present.

Even after the broken promises, many voters believe Tsipras acts honestly and with their interests at heart -- a break with leaders from parties on both the left and the right, in power for decades in Greece, who they hold responsible for steering the country into the crisis.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has won a difficult gamble in convincing the Greek parliament to agree to tough reforms demanded by Greece’s creditors, but he is paying the price of deep splits within his radical-leftist Syriza party.

Tsipras won a solid 230 votes out of the 298 lawmakers who fiercely debated Greece’s bailout-for-reforms deal into the early hours of Thursday — proof of “a large consensus”, according to Dimitris Sotiropoulos, a political science professor at Athens University.

But it was the second vote in a week that has seen the 40-year-old premier suffer a serious mutiny within his own party over his plans to secure a bailout of up to 86 billion euros ($96 billion) over three years, in exchange for more of the kind of austerity that Syriza came to power promising to end.

Last week, 39 of Syriza’s 149 MPs voted against or abstained on a first wave of reforms that had to pass in order for the bailout talks to go ahead, including widespread tax hikes. Outside the parliament, angry protesters lobbed petrol bombs at police guarding the building.

Prime Minister Tsipras won a solid 230 votes out of the 298 lawmakers who fiercely debated Greece&ap...

Prime Minister Tsipras won a solid 230 votes out of the 298 lawmakers who fiercely debated Greece's bailout-for-reforms deal into the early hours of Thursday
Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP/File

Tsipras managed to trim the rebellion to 36 ‘no’ votes and abstentions when a second bill on the reforms went to parliament on Wednesday night — but as with last week’s vote, he was forced to rely on the opposition to get it through.

“His gamble paid off thanks to help from three opposition parties — the right-wing New Democracy, the socialists from Pasok and the centre-left party To Potami,” said Sotiropoulos.

The academic estimated that Tsipras has lost the support of around 40 percent of Syriza’s rank-and-file members and a quarter of his MPs, hailing from the “left platform” and other hostile factions that are staunchly opposed to more austerity and, in some cases, continuing Greek membership of the euro.

– A break with the rebels? –

Tsipras has not had an easy few weeks. In a referendum on July 5, Greeks emphatically voted against further austerity — urged on by the prime minister himself.

A man holds a sign which reads

A man holds a sign which reads “No” for the vote in the Greek referendum, as he celebrates at Syntagma Square in Athens on July 5, 2015
Andreas Solaro, AFP/File

Days later, determined to stop Greece defaulting on its debts and hurtling out of the eurozone into the unknown, he agreed to reforms similar to those voters had just rejected, sparking accusations that he had caved to “blackmail” from the creditors.

In managing to convince a parliament with deep misgivings to approve the measures, Tsipras has scored a victory in the short-term, said Manos Papazoglou, political sciences professor at the University of Peloponnese.

“But in the long term there will be problems,” he told AFP.

“The tradition in Greece is to have strong parliamentary majorities and in this case, his party has suffered a major divide,” said Papazoglou.

Thursday’s vote placed Tsipras in the unenviable position of running what is not just a coalition government, but one that is effectively a minority administration.

A protester clashes with riot police in front of the Greek Parliament in Athens on July 15  2015

A protester clashes with riot police in front of the Greek Parliament in Athens on July 15, 2015
Angelos Tzortzinis, AFP/File

Out of 300 MPs in parliament, he counted the support of just 126 coalition MPs — 113 from Syriza and 13 from their junior partners, the nationalist Independent Greeks.

A minority government “would have difficulty passing laws in future without forging a political agreement with other parties,” said Sotiropoulos.

Government spokeswoman Olga Gerovassili admitted the result of Thursday’s voted pointed to a “clear divide” in the party and said “planned procedures” would be implemented to address it.

Tsipras has stressed that his current priority is to finalise the bailout deal. Both sides are under huge pressure to get the agreement hammered out before August 20, when Athens owes the European Central Bank a loan repayment of 3.2 billion euros it cannot afford.

But many analysts believe the prime minister will be forced to call early elections in a country that badly needs stability as it battles to stave off economic collapse.

“Elections would have negative repercussions for both the economy and the political sphere,” said Penelope Fountedaki, a law professor based at Pantion University.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (R) and Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos react during a parlia...

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (R) and Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos react during a parliament session in Athens on July 15, 2015
Aris Messinis, AFP/File

After Tsipras finally reached a symbolic consensus in parliament for the bailout deal, fresh elections could deepen divisions within the electorate, she said.

Tsipras’s best bet, she argued, is to “break with the dissidents at the heart of his party and go forward with other parties”.

Despite the troubles in his ranks, the youthful prime minister is riding high in the opinion polls, which show him overwhelmingly regarded as the best man to be running Greece at present.

Even after the broken promises, many voters believe Tsipras acts honestly and with their interests at heart — a break with leaders from parties on both the left and the right, in power for decades in Greece, who they hold responsible for steering the country into the crisis.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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