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All 300 seats in the Hellenic Parliament 151 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Registered | 9,949,684 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Turnout | 63.62% ( 1.13pp) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Parliamentary elections were held in Greece on Sunday 25 January 2015 to elect all 300 members of the Hellenic Parliament in accordance with the constitution. The election was held earlier than scheduled due to the failure of the Greek parliament to elect a new president on 29 December 2014. [1]
Syriza won a parliamentary election for the first time, winning 36% of votes and 149 seats, just two short of an absolute majority. The centre-right New Democracy (ND), the outgoing party of government, saw only a small decline from 30% to 28%, but in falling to second place suffered its worst showing to date in terms of seats. Five other parties passed the 3% electoral threshold to gain representation, all winning 5–6% of votes: the far-right Golden Dawn (XA), social-liberal To Potami, the Communist Party of Greece (KKE), right-wing populist Independent Greeks (ANEL), and centre-left PASOK. XA became the third largest party for the first time, while Potami debuted in fourth place. Formerly one of Greece's two major parties, PASOK collapsed even further to become the smallest party in Parliament, winning just 4.7% of votes and 13 seats. [2]
Syriza was in a clear position to lead a new government, winning close to a majority thanks to the majority bonus system. Though they had been expected to seek an agreement with Potami, [3] Syriza instead formed a coalition with the right-wing, anti-austerity ANEL on 26 January. [4] Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras subsequently became Prime Minister.
Greece suffered three distinct economic recessions in the turmoil of the Global Financial Crisis (Q3-Q4 2007, Q2-2008 until Q1-2009, and Q3-2009 until Q4-2013), [5] with private markets becoming inaccessible as a lending source since May 2010 (due to a debt-to-GDP ratio exceeding 146%), leaving the state to choose between conditional bailout funding from the Troika (Eurogroup, IMF, and ECB) or a sovereign default along with being forced to leave the eurozone. The outgoing government chose to accept the offered conditional bailout funding, outlining a certain level of economic reforms, privatization and austerity to be achieved throughout the programme period from May 2010 until March 2016. In return, Greece was scheduled to receive €245.6 billion of long-term bailout loans (with an interest rate moratorium until 2020). The country was also rewarded by private creditors accepting a debt restructuring deal that cut the debt burden of the state by €127.1 billion in 2012 while also transforming the remaining debt pile from short-term bonds with high interest rates to long-term bonds with low interest rates.
The incumbent government was formed after the June 2012 election by New Democracy, PASOK and Democratic Left (DIMAR). Antonis Samaras of New Democracy was Prime Minister. PASOK and DIMAR declined to participate in Samaras' cabinet, which was thus composed of New Democracy members and independents. [6] By April 2013, the government held 167 seats, down from 179 elected in the 2012 election. [7] Of those, nine were expelled for voting against austerity packages, and three left voluntarily. [7]
On 21 June 2013 DIMAR chose to withdraw from the governing coalition in protest at the unilateral closure of the state-owned Hellenic Broadcasting Corporation (ERT) ten days earlier, an action opposed by both DIMAR and PASOK. [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] and incriminated by Greece's highest administrative court, the Council of State. [9] [10] [12] DIMAR's withdrawal left the government with a slim three-seat majority of 153 seats. [10] [11] [12] Antonis Manitakis, the Minister of Administrative Reform, and Antonis Roupakiotis, the Minister of Justice, both independents, also submitted their resignation to the government. [11] [12]
DIMAR said that while they would still work with the government on a case-by-case basis, [12] following another election the party could also work with a SYRIZA-led government. [13]
In an interview with Bild on 10 February 2014, Samaras insisted that Greece did not need a new bailout, despite reports in Germany that the Greek Finance Ministry was working on a plan for one. [14] [15] The German Finance Ministry estimated that a third bailout (if established) would have a size between 10 and 20 billion euros. [14]
Both of the latest bailout programme audit reports, released independently by the European Commission and IMF in June 2014, revealed that after transfer of the scheduled bailout funds and full implementation of the agreed adjustment package in 2012, there would be a forecast financing gap of €5.6 billion in 2014, €12.3 billion in 2015 and €0bn in 2016. The new forecast financing gaps, were needed either to be covered by the government's additional lending from private capital markets - or a third additional bailout loan, but could alternatively also be countered by additional fiscal improvements through expenditure reductions, revenue hikes or increased amount of privatizations. [16] [17] Due to an improved outlook for the Greek economy, with achievement of a sustained government structural surplus since 2012 - along with both a decline of the unemployment rate and return of positive real GDP growth in 2014, [5] [18] it was possible for the Greek government to return to the bond market during the course of 2014 - for the purpose to fully fund its new extra financing gaps by additional private capital. [19] A total of €6.1bn was raised from the sale of three-year and five-year bonds in 2014, and the outgoing ND led government planned to cover its forecast financing gap for 2015 by a continued additional sale of seven-year and ten-year bonds in 2015. [20]
During the second half of 2014, the Greek government again negotiated with the Troika. The negotiations were this time about how to comply with the programme requirements, to ensure activation of the payment of its last scheduled eurozone bailout tranche in December 2014, and about a potential update of its remaining bailout programme for 2015–16. When calculating the impact of the 2015 fiscal budget presented by the Greek government, there were a disagreement, with the calculations of the Greek government showing it fully complied with the goals of its agreed "Midterm fiscal plan 2013–16", while the Troika calculations were less optimistic and concluded that a financing gap of €2.5bn existed (which would have to be covered by additional austerity measures). [21] As the Greek government insisted its calculations were more accurate than those presented by the Troika, it submitted an unchanged fiscal budget bill to the parliament, which was passed by 155 against 134 votes on 7 December. [22] The Eurogroup met on 8 December and agreed to support a technical two-month extension of the part of the Greek bailout programme under its guidance, making time both for completion of the long-awaited fifth final programme review and assessing the possibility for the European Stability Mechanism to set up a precautionary Enhanced Conditions Credit Line (ECCL) [a] in place by 1 March 2015. [23] As part of the review of the bailout programme, the outgoing ND led government had proposed to the Troika, immediately to end the previously agreed and continuing IMF bailout programme for 2015–16, replacing it with the transfer of €11bn unused bank recapitalization funds currently held as reserve by Hellenic Financial Stability Fund (HFSF) (funds in excess from the part of the bailout programme under the guidance of the eurozone), along with establishment of the precautionary ECCL. [21] In December, the Troika announced it was willing to accept this plan by the Greek government of an early exit from the bailout programme accompanied by setting up an precautionary ECCL, conditional the fifth review of the existing bailout programme first had found Greece in full compliance with its terms. [24]
The election scene is expected to take place between pro- and anti-bailout parties. The parties being pro-bailout (ND, Pasok and Potami) argues there is no viable alternative compared to respecting and completing the existing bailout programme under the guidance of the eurozone - so that it can be exited and replaced by a precautionary ECCL on 1 March 2015. While the anti-bailout left-wing Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA) party, argues it will be better to tear apart the existing bailout programme - followed by an attempt to negotiate a new creditor agreement with better terms for Greece.
On 8 December 2014, Samaras announced that the presidential election would be brought forward by a few months. The first round of voting was held on 17 December, the second on 23 December and the third on 29 December. [25] On 9 December 2014, Samaras had announced the candidacy of ND politician Stavros Dimas, jointly supported by the ruling ND–PASOK coalition, for the presidency. [26]
In the event of no super-majority after the third ballot the Greek Constitution requires the Parliament to be dissolved within ten days of the vote and snap elections to be called. [27] As the ND–PASOK coalition did not have enough seats in Parliament to ensure the election of a President by itself, there was a high possibility of an impasse on the choice, requiring a snap election.
On 29 December 2014, after failing to elect a presidential candidate in the third round of voting with the required 180 votes, [1] prime minister Samaras asked incumbent president Karolos Papoulias to dissolve the parliament. On 31 December, Papoulias formally dissolved the parliament by decree and set the new election to be held on 25 January and the new parliament to reconvene on 5 February 2015. [28]
The snap parliamentary elections called because of political opposition in the Greek parliament to elect a new Greek president, threatened to endanger the recently gained Greek recovery, according to several international economic analysts. [29] [30] [31] The rising political uncertainty also caused the Troika to suspend all scheduled remaining financial aid to Greece under its bailout programme, while noting its support would only resume pending the formation of a new-elect government respecting the already negotiated conditions. [32] Opinion polls ahead of the election provided the anti-bailout party Syriza - which announced it would not comply with the previously negotiated terms in the bailout agreement and demand a "write down on most of the nominal value of debt, so that it becomes sustainable" - with a lead, causing adverse developments on financial markets, with the Athens Stock Exchange suffering an accumulated loss of roughly 30% since the start of December 2014, and the interest rate of the ten-year government bond rising from a low of 5.6% in September 2014 [33] to 10.6% on 7 January 2015. [34] According to the ECB Executive Board member from France, "It is illegal and contrary to the treaty to reschedule a debt of a state held by a central bank", meaning such a thing would be incompatible with continued membership of the eurozone. [35] However, the risk of a Greek withdrawal from the eurozone as a result of the upcoming elections were assessed by economists from Commerzbank only to be around 25%, assuming the election would end with the same result as measured by the opinion polls in early January. [36]
9,808,760 registered voters were called up to vote, as voting in Greece is mandatory. [37] However, none of the legally existing penalties or sanctions [38] have ever been enforced. [39] Rigid restrictions required citizens to cast the ballot in the specific voting district they have been registered to. Combined with the absence of absentee ballots, early voting procedures or voting procedures for expatriate Greeks, many Greeks simply couldn't afford travelling to "their" voting district. With the rising number of expatriates, the turnout was expected to be below the turnout of the 2012 elections. [40]
250 seats were distributed on the basis of proportional representation, with a threshold of 3% required for entry into parliament. Blank and invalid votes, as well as votes cast for parties that fall short of the 3% threshold, are disregarded for seat allocation purposes. 50 additional seats were awarded as a majority bonus to the party that wins a plurality of votes, with coalitions in that regard not being counted as an overall party but having their votes counted separately for each party in the coalition, according to the election law. Parliamentary majority is achieved by a party or coalition of parties that command at least one half plus one (151 out of 300) of total seats.
Party | 17 Jun 2012 (Election) | 31 Dec 2014 (Dissolution) | 6 Jan 2015 (Pre-election) [b] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
New Democracy (ND) | 129 / 300 | 127 / 300 | 131 / 300 | |
Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA) | 71 / 300 | 71 / 300 | 71 / 300 | |
PASOK | 33 / 300 | 28 / 300 | 22 / 300 | |
Independent Greeks (ANEL) | 20 / 300 | 12 / 300 | 12 / 300 | |
Golden Dawn (ΧΑ) | 18 / 300 | 16 / 300 | 16 / 300 | |
Democratic Left (DIMAR) | 17 / 300 | 9 / 300 | 8 / 300 | |
Communist Party of Greece (KKE) | 12 / 300 | 12 / 300 | 12 / 300 | |
Independent Democratic MPs (ADIV) | 0 / 300 | 17 / 300 | 13 / 300 | |
River (Potami) | 0 / 300 | 3 / 300 | 3 / 300 | |
Movement of Democratic Socialists (KIDISO) | 0 / 300 | 0 / 300 | 6 / 300 | |
Independents | 0 / 300 | 5 / 300 | 6 / 300 |
Party | Votes | % | +/– | Seats | +/– | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Syriza | 2,245,978 | 36.34 | +8.57 | 149 | +78 | |
New Democracy | 1,718,694 | 27.81 | –1.85 | 76 | –53 | |
Popular Association–Golden Dawn | 388,387 | 6.28 | –0.64 | 17 | –1 | |
The River | 373,924 | 6.05 | New | 17 | New | |
Communist Party of Greece | 338,188 | 5.47 | +0.97 | 15 | +3 | |
Independent Greeks | 293,683 | 4.75 | –2.76 | 13 | –7 | |
PASOK | 289,469 | 4.68 | –7.60 | 13 | –20 | |
Movement of Democratic Socialists | 152,557 | 2.47 | New | 0 | New | |
Union of Centrists | 110,923 | 1.79 | +1.50 | 0 | 0 | |
Teleia | 109,500 | 1.77 | New | 0 | New | |
Popular Orthodox Rally | 63,669 | 1.03 | –0.55 | 0 | 0 | |
Antarsya–MARS | 39,497 | 0.64 | +0.32 | 0 | 0 | |
Democratic Left–Greens | 29,820 | 0.48 | –5.77 | 0 | –17 | |
Marxist–Leninist Communist Parties (KKE (m–l)/M–L KKE) | 7,999 | 0.13 | +0.01 | 0 | 0 | |
Democratic National Reform Union | 7,615 | 0.12 | New | 0 | New | |
Greek People's Democratic Liberation | 4,740 | 0.08 | New | 0 | New | |
Workers Revolutionary Party | 2,363 | 0.04 | New | 0 | New | |
Organisation of Internationalist Communists | 1,854 | 0.03 | New | 0 | New | |
National Resistance Movement | 618 | 0.01 | +0.01 | 0 | 0 | |
Greek White Movement of Today's Ideology | 76 | 0.00 | New | 0 | New | |
Radical Orthodox Solidarity Front | 16 | 0.00 | New | 0 | New | |
Panagrarian Labour Movement of Greece | 1 | 0.00 | ±0.00 | 0 | 0 | |
Independents | 1,301 | 0.02 | +0.01 | 0 | 0 | |
Total | 6,180,872 | 100.00 | – | 300 | 0 | |
Valid votes | 6,180,872 | 97.64 | ||||
Invalid/blank votes | 149,484 | 2.36 | ||||
Total votes | 6,330,356 | 100.00 | ||||
Registered voters/turnout | 9,949,684 | 63.62 | ||||
Source: Ministry of Interior |
Region | SYRIZA (%) | ND (%) | XA (%) | POTAMI (%) | KKE (%) | ANEL (%) | PASOK (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Achaea | 43.06 | 20.63 | 4.81 | 5.33 | 5.49 | 5.85 | 3.89 |
Aetolia-Akarnania | 36.53 | 29.20 | 6.43 | 4.13 | 5.66 | 3.31 | 6.05 |
Argolida | 32.29 | 33.76 | 7.32 | 5.01 | 3.59 | 2.91 | 6.65 |
Arkadia | 30.13 | 36.13 | 5.83 | 4.95 | 4.35 | 2.64 | 8.20 |
Arta | 44.14 | 30.04 | 3.76 | 3.37 | 5.11 | 2.49 | 5.26 |
Athens A | 33.61 | 30.07 | 7.05 | 7.23 | 6.04 | 4.37 | 3.47 |
Athens B | 37.08 | 25.66 | 5.73 | 7.66 | 6.94 | 4.90 | 3.40 |
Attica | 37.08 | 25.90 | 8.43 | 6.12 | 5.37 | 5.93 | 3.01 |
Boeotia | 41.55 | 22.69 | 6.65 | 4.57 | 6.96 | 4.83 | 4.22 |
Cephalonia | 38.25 | 28.92 | 6.05 | 3.89 | 9.34 | 3.59 | 4.44 |
Chalkidiki | 33.51 | 33.00 | 6.24 | 4.54 | 3.23 | 5.21 | 7.19 |
Chania | 43.10 | 19.75 | 4.33 | 12.16 | 4.77 | 5.76 | 2.87 |
Chios | 27.11 | 38.89 | 4.69 | 6.32 | 5.53 | 2.43 | 6.83 |
Corfu | 44.92 | 21.87 | 5.71 | 4.84 | 6.94 | 5.55 | 3.89 |
Corinthia | 36.77 | 29.83 | 7.29 | 5.52 | 2.96 | 4.13 | 4.58 |
Cyclades | 35.12 | 31.59 | 5.07 | 6.76 | 4.15 | 4.99 | 4.89 |
Dodecanese | 33.26 | 32.59 | 5.53 | 4.86 | 3.34 | 5.32 | 7.78 |
Drama | 26.69 | 34.51 | 5.99 | 8.34 | 3.04 | 5.05 | 7.26 |
Elis | 37.93 | 26.89 | 6.04 | 3.79 | 4.11 | 3.75 | 8.16 |
Euboea | 40.51 | 23.70 | 6.96 | 5.26 | 4.98 | 5.13 | 5.31 |
Evros | 26.69 | 37.08 | 7.50 | 5.36 | 3.26 | 5.32 | 6.55 |
Evrytania | 37.13 | 32.70 | 4.38 | 6.99 | 2.90 | 3.22 | 4.31 |
Florina | 36.31 | 35.04 | 5.01 | 3.56 | 3.76 | 3.94 | 4.77 |
Grevena | 31.48 | 33.16 | 5.83 | 3.82 | 6.73 | 2.62 | 8.12 |
Imathia | 33.94 | 28.87 | 7.48 | 5.01 | 4.92 | 5.38 | 5.27 |
Ioannina | 39.57 | 28.23 | 4.34 | 5.50 | 5.55 | 3.15 | 5.58 |
Heraklion | 47.85 | 18.53 | 2.81 | 7.87 | 3.89 | 4.37 | 5.91 |
Karditsa | 38.91 | 30.02 | 6.42 | 3.59 | 6.00 | 3.34 | 5.13 |
Kastoria | 27.08 | 38.78 | 7.67 | 5.24 | 3.63 | 4.08 | 4.84 |
Kavala | 31.27 | 31.21 | 7.11 | 5.54 | 4.27 | 5.86 | 6.12 |
Kilkis | 29.40 | 33.01 | 8.60 | 3.69 | 5.94 | 4.14 | 6.77 |
Kozani | 33.11 | 28.13 | 5.29 | 5.75 | 5.24 | 6.73 | 6.47 |
Laconia | 26.51 | 35.79 | 10.47 | 3.66 | 3.96 | 2.73 | 10.99 |
Larissa | 36.14 | 27.15 | 6.45 | 5.74 | 6.93 | 4.32 | 4.49 |
Lasithi | 43.50 | 24.84 | 2.81 | 8.03 | 2.91 | 3.11 | 6.49 |
Lefkada | 36.00 | 28.89 | 4.68 | 4.42 | 9.54 | 3.57 | 4.99 |
Lesbos | 32.94 | 30.39 | 4.66 | 4.26 | 10.81 | 5.30 | 5.12 |
Magnesia | 40.28 | 24.97 | 6.90 | 4.43 | 5.63 | 5.25 | 3.76 |
Messenia | 31.76 | 37.96 | 7.20 | 4.05 | 4.93 | 2.68 | 4.29 |
Pella | 32.14 | 33.96 | 7.56 | 4.53 | 3.50 | 3.70 | 5.79 |
Phocis | 34.77 | 31.76 | 6.50 | 4.12 | 5.97 | 4.02 | 5.01 |
Phthiotis | 35.71 | 29.13 | 6.25 | 3.96 | 4.25 | 6.05 | 3.57 |
Pieria | 30.01 | 34.08 | 7.82 | 3.87 | 4.25 | 5.56 | 4.94 |
Piraeus A | 34.40 | 29.60 | 7.44 | 6.36 | 5.27 | 5.33 | 3.35 |
Piraeus B | 42.07 | 18.94 | 7.80 | 5.53 | 8.19 | 5.55 | 3.13 |
Preveza | 37.94 | 31.78 | 4.63 | 4.34 | 6.19 | 2.72 | 5.46 |
Rethymno | 39.55 | 24.73 | 3.11 | 9.46 | 3.21 | 4.56 | 6.05 |
Rhodope | 48.45 | 20.64 | 4.89 | 12.70 | 1.84 | 2.68 | 3.33 |
Samos | 36.17 | 24.85 | 5.54 | 3.95 | 15.08 | 3.65 | 4.07 |
Serres | 26.23 | 37.44 | 6.43 | 5.71 | 3.78 | 5.51 | 6.20 |
Thesprotia | 35.90 | 37.61 | 3.68 | 4.31 | 3.76 | 2.42 | 5.47 |
Thessaloniki A | 34.12 | 24.84 | 7.07 | 7.00 | 5.61 | 5.56 | 4.12 |
Thessaloniki B | 31.61 | 29.26 | 7.93 | 6.00 | 5.04 | 5.87 | 4.29 |
Trikala | 36.16 | 32.60 | 4.64 | 4.06 | 6.77 | 3.03 | 4.06 |
Xanthi | 45.40 | 23.58 | 4.79 | 4.51 | 2.38 | 4.08 | 6.45 |
Zakynthos | 42.99 | 24.00 | 4.79 | 7.52 | 8.66 | 2.73 | 3.92 |
George Andreas Papandreou is an American-born Greek politician who served as Prime Minister of Greece from 2009 to 2011. He is currently serving as an MP for Movement for Change.
The Panhellenic Socialist Movement, known mostly by its acronym PASOK, is a social-democratic political party in Greece. Until 2012 it was one of the two major parties in the country, along with New Democracy, its main political rival. After a decade of poor electoral outcomes, PASOK has retained its position as one of the main Greek political parties and is currently the second largest party in the Greek Parliament.
New Democracy is a liberal-conservative political party in Greece. In contemporary Greek politics, New Democracy has been the main centre-right to right wing political party and one of the two major parties along with its historic rival, the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK). New Democracy and PASOK were created in the wake of the toppling of the military junta in 1974, ruling Greece in succession for the next four decades. Following the electoral decline of PASOK, New Democracy remained one of the two major parties in Greece, the other being the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA). The party was founded in 1974 by Konstantinos Karamanlis and in the same year it formed the first cabinet of the Third Hellenic Republic. New Democracy is a member of the European People's Party, the largest European political party since 1999, the Centrist Democrat International, and the International Democracy Union.
Antonis Samaras is a Greek politician who served as 14th Prime Minister of Greece from 2012 to 2015. Member of the New Democracy party, he was its president from 2009 until 2015. Samaras started his national political career as Minister of Finance in 1989; he served as Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1989 to 1992 and Minister of Culture in 2009.
The Coalition of the Radical Left – Progressive Alliance, best known by the syllabic abbreviation SYRIZA, is a centre-left to left-wing political party in Greece. It was founded in 2004 as a political coalition of left-wing and radical left parties, and registered as a political party in 2012.
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The Greek government formation of May 2012 was a series of failed attempts to form a new government after the legislative election in May 2012 by the three largest parties: New Democracy (centre-right), Coalition of the Radical Left and Panhellenic Socialist Movement, respectively, and then followed by the President of Greece. After the negotiations led by the president had failed on 15 May, a temporary caretaker cabinet under Council of State president Panagiotis Pikrammenos was appointed on 16 May, and a new election was set for 17 June.
European Parliament elections were held in Greece on 25 May 2014 to elect the 21 Greek members of the European Parliament. The number of seats allocated to Greece declined from 22 to 21, as a result of the 2013 reapportionment of seats in the European Parliament.
The Greek government-debt crisis began in 2009 and, as of November 2017, was still ongoing. During this period, many changes had occurred in Greece. The income of many Greeks has declined, levels of unemployment have increased, elections and resignations of politicians have altered the country's political landscape radically, the Greek parliament has passed many austerity bills, and protests have become common sights throughout the country.
The River was a centrist and social-liberal political party in Greece. The party was founded in February 2014 by Stavros Theodorakis. The party did not run in the 2019 elections and had no seats in the Hellenic Parliament.
Indirect presidential elections were held in Greece in December 2014 and February 2015 for the succession to Karolos Papoulias as President of the Hellenic Republic. The candidate of the ND–PASOK government, Stavros Dimas, failed to secure the required majority of MPs of the Hellenic Parliament in the first three rounds of voting in December. According to the provisions of the Constitution of Greece, a snap election was held on 25 January 2015, which was won by the left-wing Syriza party. Following the convening of the new Parliament, the presidential election resumed. On 18 February 2015, veteran ND politician Prokopis Pavlopoulos, backed by the Syriza-ANEL coalition government, was elected with 233 votes.
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This article details the fourteen austerity packages passed by the Government of Greece between 2010 and 2017. These austerity measures were a result of the Greek government-debt crisis and other economic factors. All of the legislation listed remains in force.
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A referendum to decide whether Greece should accept the bailout conditions in the country's government-debt crisis proposed jointly by the European Commission (EC), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Central Bank (ECB) on 25 June 2015 took place on 5 July 2015. The referendum was announced by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras in the early morning of 27 June 2015 and ratified the following day by the Parliament and the President. It was the first referendum to be held since the republic referendum of 1974 and the only one in modern Greek history not to concern the form of government.
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Article 51, Clause 5: The exercise of the right to vote is compulsory.
Article 117, Clause 1: The elector who unjustifiably does not vote is punished with imprisonment of [at least] one month and up to one year.