Conservative Greek PM Mitsotakis Secures Second Term With Thumping Majority - BEST WEBSITE FOR DAILY POPULAR WORLD TOP NEWS - JTN

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Conservative Greek PM Mitsotakis Secures Second Term With Thumping Majority


<p>Conservative leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis secured a clear parliamentary majority and won a second four-year term as Prime Minister of Greece on Sunday. Mitsotakis&acute;s New Democracy party secured over 40 percent of the vote, well ahead of former Greece prime minister Alexis Tsiprasleftist&rsquo;s Syriza party, which managed under 18 percent, according to over 90 percent of the ballot counted, as reported by the news agency AFP.&nbsp;</p> <p>The margin is the widest for the conservatives in almost 50 years. After securing a clear majority and registering a win in the elections, Mitsotakis said that the people have given his party a safe majority and now major reforms will proceed rapidly. &ldquo;The people have given us a safe majority. Major reforms will proceed rapidly,&rdquo; Mitsotakis said, as quoted by AFP. He further stated that he had &ldquo;ambitious&rdquo; targets for a new term that could &ldquo;transform&rdquo; Greece.</p> <p>The 55-year-old Harvard graduate had already scored a thumping win in an election just a month ago. But having fallen short by five seats in the parliament of being able to form a single-party government, he refused to try to form a coalition, in effect forcing 9.8 million Greek voters back to the ballot boxes.</p> <p>The radical-left MeRA25 party of former finance minister Yanis Varoufakis&acute;s failed to make it past the three percent threshold to get into parliament, while Tsipras&acute;s party scored even less than in May, losing a further 300,000 votes, as reported by AFP. With the strong swing to the right -- including the arrival of three hard-right parties in parliament -- Varoufakis said his left-wing party would be sorely missed in parliament.</p> <p>Mitsotakis became prime minister in 2019 when he defeated his predecessor Tsipras on a vow to move on from a decade of economic crisis.</p> <p>That election was the first in the EU nation&acute;s post-bailout era when businesses and workers were ailing under the burden of heavy taxes imposed by Syriza to build a budget surplus demanded by international creditors. Over the next four years, tax burdens were eased, and while the Covid-19 pandemic wiped out Greece&acute;s vital tourism revenues, the country has since bounced back strongly with growth of 8.3 percent in 2021 and 5.9 percent last year.</p> <p>That was helped in part by over 57 billion euros ($62 billion) dished out by the government to cushion the impact of the health crisis and inflation. Mitsotakis also had a licence to spend more under the EU&acute;s more relaxed pandemic-era rules. According to AFP, he has played up Greece&acute;s newfound economic health in his re-election bid, saying his conservatives have cut 50 taxes while increasing national output by 29 billion euros and overseeing the largest infrastructure upgrades since 1975.</p> <p><strong>Subscribe And Follow ABP Live On Telegram:</strong> <a href="https://ift.tt/Q8uoGk5 style="font-weight: 400;">https://ift.tt/4PcOyga>

No comments:

Post a Comment

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner