A month after he resigned from his post as prime minister, a
jubilant Alexis Tsipras declared victory in Greece's snap elections Sunday.
Speaking to a
crowd of cheering supporters in Athens, Tsipras said his Syriza party had been
given a "clear mandate" at the polls.
"This
result does not belong to Syriza. This result belongs to the working classes of
this country, the people who fight for a better tomorrow, who dream of a better
tomorrow," Tsipras said, "and this is something that we will achieve
through a lot of hard work."
With more than
50% of votes counted, Syriza was emerging as a clear winner with 35.5% of the
vote, according to preliminary elections results released by the Greek Interior
Ministry. That would give Syriza 145 of the Greek Parliament's 300 seats.
Panos Kammenos, the leader of the right-wing Independent Greeks
party, told reporters that his party, which won 3.7% of the vote, would ally
itself with Syriza to form a coalition. Together, they'd have enough seats to
secure a majority in parliament.
Even before the
final vote tally was announced, one thing was clear: The economically frail
country doesn't have time for a fresh round of political uncertainty.
'Greece is not sustainable'
Athens needs a government to tackle its
struggling economy, keep the bailout on track and try to deal with the
challenge of thousands of
migrants arriving on its shores.
Unless a new government gets to work quickly, Greece risks being
unable to get more money from Europe. That would leave it unable to pay 3.2
billion euros ($3.8 billion) it owes to the International Monetary Fund later
this year.
"Greece is
not sustainable and the big issues are how far the program will go off track
and how many eurozone members will join Germany in viewing missed targets as no
longer a price worth paying," said Gabriel Sterne, the head of global
macro research at Oxford Economics.
The rescue
agreed to in July with Europe -- worth up to 86 billion euros ($97 billion) --
prevented financial collapse and kept Greece in the euro.
New bailout, new elections
The leader of Greece's opposition New
Democracy party, which had argued it was better qualified to implement the
measures called for by the latest bailout, conceded defeat Sunday as
preliminary results of snap elections came in.
It was Syriza's
leader, Tsipras, who accepted the terms of the new bailout, disappointing many
of his left-wing supporters.
Tsipras became Prime Minister after winning elections in January
with pledges to get some of Greece's huge debt burden written off and roll back
unpopular austerity measures.
But he was
eventually forced to back down as EU leaders refused to budge and the Greek
economy sank deeper into the mire.
After having to
rely on opposition lawmakers to secure parliamentary approval for the rescue
package, Tsiprasresigned as Prime Minister last month and called for early elections. He
said he wanted the Greek people's support to take the reform program forward.
Economy expected to shrink
Regardless of the result, the IMF says
Greece desperately needs "substantial" debt relief. Without it, the
country may once again find itself unable to pay its bills in the long term.
Europe has been unwilling to talk about that, saying the first
review of Greece's economic reforms takes precedence.
Meanwhile,
Greece's economy remains in a fragile state after the chaos of the summer.
Capital controls
are still in place, its industrial base has shrunk, and unemployment has been
hovering around 25%.
"We've seen
a big drop in economic sentiment; we've seen big drops in imports and exports,
so there's likely to be a big slowdown in the economy," Raoul Ruparel, a
director of Open Europe, told CNN.
Greek GDP is
expected to shrink by 2.3% this year and by 1.3% next year.
And the disruption brought about by yet another round of voting
isn't helping matters.
"Nothing is
happening in the political sphere and that means nothing can happen in
reforming the economy," Ruparel said.
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