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With a second bailout deal approved, current PM Papademos's government is set to leave office [Reuters] |
Evangelos Venizelos, the Greek finance minister, will
run unopposed
for the leadership of the country's Socialist party, officials have
confirmed.
Venizelos, 55, has won the backing of the PASOK party's leaders and
appears to be a certainty to lead the party after a poll, open to both
members of the party and the public, on March 18.
First on his agenda will be a parliamentary election, to be held in
late April or early May. PASOK has been trailing the conservative New
Democracy party in opinion polls in the run-up to that election.
"Our country is at a crucial juncture and as a result a very large
number of PASOK officials have supported my candidacy," Venizelos told a
party conference at which his only potential rival, former minister and
EU commissioner, Christos Papoutsis, dropped out after failing to
secure sufficient backing.
Also on Venizelos's agenda, as finance minister, will be managing the
country's debt crisis response through a bond swap deal secured last
week.
A pensioner on crutches hurled yoghurt at the minister
during Sunday's PASOK press conference, a reminder of the deep
unpopularity of the austerity measures he has overseen during his nine
months in office.
Default averted
Greece averted an uncontrolled default on Thursday when it struck a
debt exchange deal with private creditors that would allow a $171bn
[131bn euro] bailout by the European Union and International Monetary
Fund to go forward later this month.
Venizelos, a constitutional expert turned politician, was the principal negotiator during those talks.
Greece's second EU/IMF-led bailout in two years will bring to an end
the term of the country's current technocratic coalition government, led
by Lucas Papademos, the prime minister.
The government was formed in November with the mandate of concluding
bailout talks and holding elections, replacing a government led by
George Papandreou, the current PASOK leader.
Both PASOK and the New Democracy back Papademos and the austerity
measures he took to obtain the bailout. That has cost them dearly in the
run-up to the election, which is unlikely to produce an outright winner
as small, left-wing, anti-austerity parties gain at their expense.
Conservatives ambitious
Antonis Samaras, Conservative leader, reiterated on Sunday his
party's intention to seek an absolute majority in the Greek parliament.
"The country can't be governed without one," he told party members. "I wouldn't have negotiating power abroad".
While most polls show that New Democracy is firmly in the lead, it is
well short of the support required to rule on its own. Analysts expect
it to form a coalition with PASOK.
"What's required is a coalition, because it's likely to be a
coalition. There's really no one party that will gain enough votes to
lead outright. So what we need to see is a coalition that will take the
tough measures required," Louise Cooper, a market analyst at BGC
partners, told Al Jazeera.
"But, to be quite honest, a lot of Greece's sovereignty has already
been handed over to Brussels and to the IMF. It's not Greek politicians
that are effectively determining taxation and spending policy anymore."
Elections will be held at some point after April 29, Pantelis Kapsis, a government spokesman, said late on Friday.
Samaras said on Sunday that they will be held "after Easter", which in Greece falls on April 15.
Promises to fulfil
Regardless of who wins the poll, Wolfgang Schaeuble, the German
finance minister, said that the Greek government would be expected to
fulfil its promises to the EU and IMF.
"Greece must stick to its obligations after the election. That's the
basis for the [bailout] programme," he said in an interview with Greek
newspaper To Vima, published on Saturday.
Austerity measures linked to the country's first EU/IMF bailout in
2010 have tipped the Greek economy into its worst slump since the second
world war. The country is currently in its fifth year of recession.
New data released on Friday showed that the country's gross domestic product shrank by seven per cent in 2011.
Unemployment is currently at 21 per cent, and more than half of the country's young people are out of work.
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