Wednesday June 19, 2013 Search
Weather | Athens
34o C
22o C
News
Business
Comment
Life
Sports
Community
Survival Guide
Greek Edition
Coalition strains as votes on measures, budget loom

 Weak support in privatization ballot poses urgent problem for PM as he seeks to tie up troika deal
Policemen, coast guard officers and firemen protested the government’s plans to slash their salaries in central Athens on Thursday.

Greece’s coalition faces an extremely tense few days ahead of two decisive votes in Parliament next week after rising dissent in PASOK threatened to leave the three-party government without the necessary support to pass the austerity and reform measures demanded by the country’s lenders.

Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is due to meet with his 127 deputies on Monday, ahead of the vote on structural reforms on Wednesday and the ballot on the 2013 national budget, which will be held at midnight on Sunday, November 11.

He will do so unsure of whether his coalition government will go into those votes with enough lawmakers to pass the legislation. Samaras and his aides were highly concerned by the crumbling support for the government’s privatization bill during a ballot on Wednesday. Only 148 of almost 180 coalition deputies backed the legislation paving the way for the sell-off of public utilities. The bill only passed because not all 300 MPs voted.

Democratic Left, which did not back the bill, has said it will oppose the reforms unless the changes to labor regulations proposed by the troika are withdrawn. PASOK, meanwhile, lost one lawmaker on Friday and up to six others have threatened to reject the measures.

This could leave the government with as few as 153 votes in next week’s votes, provided no New Democracy deputies oppose the package.

Eurozone finance ministers are due to meet on November 12 and could decide on whether to release more funding for Greece.

The main opposition party, SYRIZA, experienced its own turmoil yesterday after parliamentary spokesman Panayiotis Lafazanis suggested the leftists were not in a position to form the next government. “We are not ready to govern,” he told ANT1 TV. “I refuse to fool people.”

The statement prompted party supporters to ring SYRIZA headquarters to complain and elicited an immediate response from leader Alexis Tsipras. “We are ready to avert disaster,” he said. “We are ready to take on the responsibility of rebuilding the country.”

Lafazanis then said his comment had been misinterpreted, adding that SYRIZA was better prepared to govern than any other opposition party had been.

ekathimerini.com , Thursday November 1, 2012 (21:02)  
Troika takes a ‘pause’ amid coalition concerns
Minister warns of delays in hospital supply tenders and of price-fixing
New sustainable development director decries fund waste
Police operation on drug ring leads to 25 arrests
CYPRUS
Nicosia calls for changes to its bailout terms
Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades said creditors must urgently provide a long-term solution to restore Cyprus’s biggest bank to health so that capital controls can be lifted and “devastat...
MARKETS
Mid-cap rise cancels out blue chip drop
The losses sustained by blue chips during Wednesday’s bourse session were offset by significant gains among mid-caps, suggesting that the Athens Exchange’s recent redesignation as an emergin...
Inside Business
SOCCER
Dutch coach Huub Stevens aims to unite PAOK fans
New PAOK coach Huub Stevens has called for unity among fans after taking charge of the Greek club whose players said they feared for their lives last season because of regular protests. Gree...
CANOE
Tribute paid to Andreas Kiligkaridis
Greek canoeing champion Andreas Kiligkardis died on Wednesday after losing his battle against leukemia. The 37-year-old had been in a coma since last Tuesday at a hospital in Poland - where ...
Inside Sports
COMMENTARY
It´s not brain surgery
The people of this country need to see their politicians start producing real, tangible results. One of the leading factors behind the anger and frustration felt by so many Greeks toward the...
EDITORIAL
Holding the course
There is no room for ego trips and personal whims when the country’s survival is at stake. The three party leaders who agreed just a year ago to join forces in order to govern the country mu...
Inside Comment
SPONSORED LINK: FinanzNachrichten.de
 RECENT NEWS
1. Troika takes a ‘pause’ amid coalition concerns
2. Minister warns of delays in hospital supply tenders and of price-fixing
3. New sustainable development director decries fund waste
4. Nicosia calls for changes to its bailout terms
5. Police operation on drug ring leads to 25 arrests
6. Crete hit by another series of small tremors
more news
Today
This Week
1. Greeks: second happiest people in Europe, despite crisis, says study
2. Jean-Claude Juncker on the Greek crisis, then and now
3. Three injured in Thessaloniki grill house protest
4. Tourists to reach 17 million in 2013, says industry association
5. EU to unveil proposals on youth jobless as recession persists
6. Revision of Cypriot bailout terms not likely, eurozone officials
Today
This Week
1. Greece cut to emerging market at MSCI in world first
2. ERT journalists defy closing down order to continue broadcasts as coalition faces severe test
3. Journalist unions call media strike to protest ERT closure as employees continue broadcasting
4. Greek public broadcaster ERT to be shut down, reopened with fewer employees
5. European Broadcasting Union expresses dismay at closure of ERT, calls on PM for reversal
6. Cyprus president Anastasiades criticises bailout terms
Advertiser Link
Amundi, ç Íï.1 åôáéñåßá ôçò Åõñþðçò óôç Äéá÷åßñéóç Äéáèåóßìùí
   Find us ...
  ... on
Twitter
     ... on Facebook   
About us  |  Subscriptions  |  Advertising  |  Contact us  |  Athens Plus  |  International Herald Tribune  |  RSS
Copyright © 2013, H KAΘHMEPINH All Rights Reserved.