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Greek conservative party electing new leader

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Greece's conservative New Democracy party was voting to elect a new leader Sunday, with a street-smart lawyer and the reformist son of the party's ex-chief vying to head the main opposition party.

Over 300,000 party members reportedly cast ballots nationwide at stations that opened at 0500 GMT and closed at 1700 GMT.

Results are expected late in the evening.

The two candidates are 62-year-old party stalwart Vangelis Meimarakis and 47-year-old Kyriakos Mitsotakis, son of former New Democracy leader and ex-prime minister Constantine Mitsotakis.

Both sides were reportedly claiming victory on Sunday but the head of the party's electoral committee refused to confirm either claim.

"What is written and said about certain predictions bears no relation to reality," said electoral committee head Yiannis Tragakis.

A tough-talking former parliament chief who last year temporarily ran the party, Meimarakis took an 11.3-percent lead over the more patrician Mitsotakis in the first round of the vote on December 20.

But Mitsotakis hopes to pick up the voters of two other candidates who were eliminated in the first round.

Vangelis Meimarakis is hoping to become official leader of Greece's conservative New Democracy ...
Vangelis Meimarakis is hoping to become official leader of Greece's conservative New Democracy party after being interim chief
Angelos Tzortzinis, AFP/File

Meimarakis, who cultivates a man-of-the-people profile, rejects "extreme" cutbacks and favours "social liberalism with a human face", while Mitsotakis is an ardent reformer who champions "common sense against populism."

New Democracy has been without an elected leader since July, when party head Antonis Samaras abruptly resigned, leaving Meimarakis in charge.

Harvard-educated Mitsotakis says he is better equipped to lead the party against youthful leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who has beaten New Democracy twice in the last elections, most recently in September with Meimarakis as interim leader.

A commentator in leftist daily Avgi on Tuesday took a clear stand in favour of the older Meimarakis.

"We await a Meimarakis victory, which should produce a democratic, useful, cooperative political opposition," commentator Betty Vakalopoulou wrote.

Mitsotakis has shrugged off criticism that he got this far thanks to his family connections. His father Constantine Mitsotakis headed the party from 1984 to 1993 while his sister Dora Bakoyannis is a former Athens mayor and ex-foreign minister.

"I am proud of both my name and surname," Mitsotakis said in a recent interview.

"I feel that I am better suited for the job," he said.

Mitsotakis has been accused of excessive job-cutting zeal during his term as administrative reform minister in 2013-2015.

"I don't think that firing cleaning ladies counts as reform," Meimarakis said in a recent interview, slamming his rival.

"I found this policy in place, I applied it as best I could," Mitsotakis retorted this week.

Greece’s conservative New Democracy party was voting to elect a new leader Sunday, with a street-smart lawyer and the reformist son of the party’s ex-chief vying to head the main opposition party.

Over 300,000 party members reportedly cast ballots nationwide at stations that opened at 0500 GMT and closed at 1700 GMT.

Results are expected late in the evening.

The two candidates are 62-year-old party stalwart Vangelis Meimarakis and 47-year-old Kyriakos Mitsotakis, son of former New Democracy leader and ex-prime minister Constantine Mitsotakis.

Both sides were reportedly claiming victory on Sunday but the head of the party’s electoral committee refused to confirm either claim.

“What is written and said about certain predictions bears no relation to reality,” said electoral committee head Yiannis Tragakis.

A tough-talking former parliament chief who last year temporarily ran the party, Meimarakis took an 11.3-percent lead over the more patrician Mitsotakis in the first round of the vote on December 20.

But Mitsotakis hopes to pick up the voters of two other candidates who were eliminated in the first round.

Vangelis Meimarakis is hoping to become official leader of Greece's conservative New Democracy ...

Vangelis Meimarakis is hoping to become official leader of Greece's conservative New Democracy party after being interim chief
Angelos Tzortzinis, AFP/File

Meimarakis, who cultivates a man-of-the-people profile, rejects “extreme” cutbacks and favours “social liberalism with a human face”, while Mitsotakis is an ardent reformer who champions “common sense against populism.”

New Democracy has been without an elected leader since July, when party head Antonis Samaras abruptly resigned, leaving Meimarakis in charge.

Harvard-educated Mitsotakis says he is better equipped to lead the party against youthful leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who has beaten New Democracy twice in the last elections, most recently in September with Meimarakis as interim leader.

A commentator in leftist daily Avgi on Tuesday took a clear stand in favour of the older Meimarakis.

“We await a Meimarakis victory, which should produce a democratic, useful, cooperative political opposition,” commentator Betty Vakalopoulou wrote.

Mitsotakis has shrugged off criticism that he got this far thanks to his family connections. His father Constantine Mitsotakis headed the party from 1984 to 1993 while his sister Dora Bakoyannis is a former Athens mayor and ex-foreign minister.

“I am proud of both my name and surname,” Mitsotakis said in a recent interview.

“I feel that I am better suited for the job,” he said.

Mitsotakis has been accused of excessive job-cutting zeal during his term as administrative reform minister in 2013-2015.

“I don’t think that firing cleaning ladies counts as reform,” Meimarakis said in a recent interview, slamming his rival.

“I found this policy in place, I applied it as best I could,” Mitsotakis retorted this week.

AFP
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