Greek rivals launch final push before Sunday election

Athens, May 19 (AFP/APP): Greece’s outgoing conservative Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and leftist challenger Alexis Tsipras will make a final push for votes at closing rallies on Friday ahead of the most uncertain general election in a decade.

Harvard graduate Mitsotakis has picked a spot beneath the imposing Acropolis in Athens to tout his record of steady growth, tax cuts and a post-pandemic tourism revival that has offered debt-ridden Greece a rare respite of economic stability.

Tsipras will travel to the western port of Patras, Greece’s third largest city, to argue that the incumbent government had handed out billions of euros to political allies while Greeks are struggling with high inflation.

Political dynasty scion Mitsotakis and atheist leftist Tsipras have travelled from island to border in recent weeks, canvassing for votes in an election that, because of a change in the electoral system, may require a second round of voting — likely on July 2.

Current polls give the outgoing prime minister a clear lead of between five and seven percentage points, but the rules for Sunday’s ballot set a high bar for an absolute majority that no party is likely to clear.

Mitsotakis has repeatedly urged voters not to squander Greece’s economic gains. He has warned that failure to return his New Democracy party to power would lead to “paralysis” and “chaos” given geopolitical challenges such as the Ukraine war and record inflation.

– Stability –

Tsipras, a 48-year-old engineer who was prime minister from 2015 to 2019, has denounced Mitsotakis’s government as one that “does not care about the problems of the people”.

The leftist, who led a rocky bailout negotiation in 2015 that nearly crashed Greece out of the euro, says the government’s allies have gained most from Mitsotakis’s term.

He has also highlighted a wiretap scandal that forced the resignations of the head of the intelligence service and a nephew of Mitsotakis, who was a top aide in his office.

Almost 10 million Greeks are eligible to cast ballots on Sunday. With nearly 440,000 Greeks as young as 16 voting for the first time, both leaders are aggressively courting the youth vote, which is heavily influenced by high unemployment.

While Greece posted growth of 5.9 percent in 2022, Tsipras has argued that the benefits have not trickled down to the population, with many workers on wages that have not kept pace with sharply rising costs.

He is pushing for salary hikes that Mitsotakis says will cost over 80 billion euros. Tsipras’s estimate is four times less — and he argues that Greece could get more EU financial aid.

Rejecting accusations of fiscal irresponsibility, Tsipras said that on his watch, Greece “exited the bailout safely, we renegotiated the public debt and left 37 billion euros in state coffers”.

But Mitsotakis, who has never lost an election against Tsipras, wields stability as his trump card.

“Are we going to continue building a strong Greece or return to a time when Greece was the pariah of Europe?” he asked at a rally in the northeastern city of Kastoria on Wednesday.

– Rage and justice –

For 72-year-old retiree Nikos Petropoulos, “He’s a prime minister who restored the image of Greece overseas.

“Growth is back and at least we don’t have companies closing everywhere likes with Tsipras.”

But store worker Giorgos Antonopoulos, 39, said inflation meant that “salaries are used up halfway during the month and nothing has been done to address this problem”.

Adding to the uncertainty is the impact on the vote of a train crash in February that killed 57 — mostly university students.

Greece’s worst rail disaster on record sparked days of angry protests.

The government drew fire after initially trying to blame the accident exclusively on human error, when Greece’s notoriously poor rail network has suffered from years of under-investment.

This week, a group representing the victims of the crash and their families filed a criminal lawsuit against Mitsotakis, the current and former transport ministers, and officials.

“I completely understand their rage and am the first who wants justice to be meted out at all levels,” Mitsotakis told Antenna TV this week.

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