June 2023 Greek legislative election

Last updated

June 2023 Greek legislative election
Flag of Greece.svg
  May 2023 25 June 2023 Next  

All 300 seats in the Hellenic Parliament
151 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered9,813,595
Turnout53.74% (Decrease2.svg7.36pp)
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
Prime Minister of the Hellenic Republic (49347116768) (cropped).jpg
Zoran Zaev with Alexis Tsipras (cropped) (cropped).jpg
Nikos Androulakis PASOK.jpg
Leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis Alexis Tsipras Nikos Androulakis
Party New Democracy Syriza PASOK–KINAL
Last election40.79%, 146 seats20.07%, 71 seats11.46%, 41 seats
Seats won1584732
Seat changeIncrease2.svg 12Decrease2.svg 24Decrease2.svg 9
Popular vote2,115,322930,013617,487
Percentage40.56%17.83%11.84%
SwingDecrease2.svg 0.23pp Decrease2.svg 2.24pp Increase2.svg 0.38pp

 Fourth partyFifth partySixth party
 
Dimitris Koutsoumpas in 2023.jpg
Vasilis Stigkas.png
Kuriakos Belopoulos.jpg
Leader Dimitris Koutsoumpas Vasilis Stigkas Kyriakos Velopoulos
Party KKE Spartans EL
Last election7.23%, 26 seats4.45%, 16 seats
Seats won211212
Seat changeDecrease2.svg 5NewDecrease2.svg 4
Popular vote401,224243,922231,491
Percentage7.69%4.68%4.44%
SwingIncrease2.svg 0.46pp NewDecrease2.svg 0.01pp

 Seventh partyEighth party
 
Zoi Konstantopoulou a Sept 2015 (cropped).jpg
Leader Dimitris Natsios Zoe Konstantopoulou
Party NIKI PE
Last election2.92%, 0 seats2.89%, 0 seats
Seats won108
Seat changeIncrease2.svg 10Increase2.svg 8
Popular vote193,124165,523
Percentage3.69%3.17%
SwingIncrease2.svg 0.77pp Increase2.svg 0.28pp

2023 Greek Legislative Snap Election.svg
Results by constituency

Prime Minister before election

Ioannis Sarmas
Caretaker

Prime Minister after election

Kyriakos Mitsotakis
ND

Snap parliamentary elections were held in Greece on 25 June 2023. [1] [2] [3] All 300 seats in the Hellenic Parliament were contested. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis called for the snap vote after the May 2023 elections did not result in any party gaining a majority, although his centre-right New Democracy made unanticipated gains and increased its share of the vote. As a result, no coalition government was formed by any of the parties eligible to do so. [4] [5] [6]

Contents

In contrast to the May elections, the June vote used a majority bonus system, making a majority government more likely. [7] On 25 May 2023, as required by Greece's constitution, President Katerina Sakellaropoulou appointed Ioannis Sarmas as caretaker prime minister until the formation of the next government following the elections. [8]

New Democracy increased their number of seats in parliament, achieving a majority, while the main opposition Syriza lost seats. Minor parties Spartans, Victory, and Course of Freedom entered parliament for the first time. [9]

Electoral system

The ballots in a polling station in Argos. June 2023 Greek election - ballots.jpg
The ballots in a polling station in Argos.
The polling booth in a polling station in Argos. Polling booth in Greece (June 2023 election).jpg
The polling booth in a polling station in Argos.

In January 2020, soon after returning to power in the 2019 legislative election, New Democracy, which has always been a proponent of majority bonuses since 1974, passed a new electoral law to reinstate the bonus that had been eliminated by the SYRIZA-ANEL coalition government's 2016 law (which established a purely proportional system with a 3% electoral threshold), albeit under a very different formula. The party list coming first with at least 25% of the votes would receive 20 extra seats, with one more seat for every half percentage point above 25%, to a maximum of 50 extra seats at 40% (or more) of the votes. Once this bonus has been attributed, the proper proportional distribution begins for the remaining seats, which can range from 250 if one party gathered at least 40%, to 300 if no party reached 25%. [10] This 2020 law would take effect starting from the next Greek election after the May 2023 election.

A 2019 law granted the right to vote for Greeks abroad who have lived for two years in Greece during the previous 35 years and who have submitted a tax return during the year of the election or the previous year. Voters from abroad choose the national-wide ballot of their desired party without choosing candidates, and their vote is counted equally in final results. [11] Voting is theoretically compulsory, with voter registration being automatic, [12] but the penalties and sanctions in place for those who do not vote are unenforced. [13]

Contesting parties, alliances and independents

On 8 June 2023, the Supreme Court ruled that 26 political parties, 4 alliances and 2 independents had met the criteria to contest the election. Nineteen of these had also participated in the previous election. The names of the 32 entities are listed below in alphabetical order. [14]

  1. Anticapitalist Left Cooperation for the Overthrow
  2. Assembly of Greeks
  3. Athanasios Georgiou (Independent)
  4. Breath of Democracy
  5. Communist Party of Greece
  6. Communist Party of Greece (Marxist–Leninist)
  7. Course of Freedom
  8. Digital Hellenism in the Whole
  9. Ecologist Greens – Green Unity
  10. Greek Ecologists
  11. Greek Solution
  12. Green & Purple
  13. Marxist–Leninist Communist Party of Greece
  14. European Realistic Disobedience Front 25
  15. Movement of the Poor
  16. National Front
  17. New Democracy
  18. Organization for the Reconstruction of the Communist Party of Greece
  19. Organisation of Internationalist Communists of Greece
  20. Panathinaikos Movement
  21. Panhellenic Socialist Movement – Movement for Change
  22. Patriotic Coalition
  23. Popular European Party
  24. Republican Party of Greece – Technocratic Republican Reforming Front of Patriots
  25. Spartans
  26. Spentzas Polykarpos, Radio Operator of the Ship "Pothiti", 1978 – Bermuda Triangle – UFO – USO Extraterrestrials – Einstein – Santorinis Pavlos (Independent)
  27. Syriza – Progressive Alliance
  28. Union of Centrists
  29. Democratic Patriotic Movement – Victory
  30. Vision for the Greek Renaissance
  31. Voice of Logic Afroditi Latinopoulou
  32. Well – Movement

Slogans

Party or allianceOriginal sloganEnglish translation
ND «Σταθερά, Τολμηρά, Μπροστά»"Constantly, Boldly, Forward"
SYRIZA «Δίκαιη Κοινωνία. Ευημερία για Όλους»"Just Society. Prosperity for All"
PASOK-KINAL «Απόφαση αλλαγής»"Decision for change"
KKE «100% Λαϊκή, Μαχητική Αντιπολίτευση»"100% People's, Fighting Opposition"
SP «Για την πιο ισχυρή Εθνική Αντιπολίτευση»"For the strongest National Opposition"
EL «Πρώτα η Ελλάδα, Πρώτα οι Έλληνες»"Greece First, Greeks First"
NIKI «Διεκδικούμε την Ελλάδα που μας αξίζει»"We claim the Greece we deserve"
PE «Δώσε Ζωή στην Βουλή»"Give Life (Zoe) to the Parliament"
M25 «Θέλεις αυτήν τη φωνή στη Βουλή;»"Do you want this voice on in parliament?"

Parties

NameLeadersIdeology
New Democracy Kyriakos Mitsotakis Liberal conservatism
Syriza Alexis Tsipras Democratic socialism
PASOK – Movement for Change Nikos Androulakis Social democracy
Communist Party of Greece Dimitris Koutsoumpas Communism
Spartans Vasilis Stigkas Ultranationalism
Greek Solution Kyriakos Velopoulos National conservatism
Victory Dimitris Natsios Religious conservatism
Course of Freedom Zoe Konstantopoulou Anti-establishment

Opinion polls

Local regression trend line of poll results from 21 May 2023 to the present day, with each line corresponding to a political party and a 7-day average compared to the May Election. OpinionPollingGreeceLegislativeElectionJune2023.svg
Local regression trend line of poll results from 21 May 2023 to the present day, with each line corresponding to a political party and a 7-day average compared to the May Election.

Results

New Democracy won 41% of the vote, which allowed it to gain 50 bonus seats. This led to New Democracy winning a majority of seats. Syriza won nearly 18% of the vote. The newly created Spartans party won 4.7% of the vote, which allowed it to enter Parliament. [15] Overall, eight parties crossed the 3% threshold to enter Parliament. The turnout was at 54%, which was 7pp lower than the turnout in the May election. Reacting to his party's victory, Mitsotakis said, "The people have given us a safe majority. Major reforms will go ahead quickly." According to political analyst Nick Malkoutzis, "Mitsotakis has been rewarded by voters as the leader who has led Greece out of a severe debt crisis and three international bailouts back into a growth path. Someone who has kept, at least some, of his pledges which is more than many in Greece had previously done." [16] [17]

Results, showing the winning party in each municipal unit.
.mw-parser-output .legend{page-break-inside:avoid;break-inside:avoid-column}.mw-parser-output .legend-color{display:inline-block;min-width:1.25em;height:1.25em;line-height:1.25;margin:1px 0;text-align:center;border:1px solid black;background-color:transparent;color:black}.mw-parser-output .legend-text{}
ND (989)
SYRIZA (18)
PASOK (11)
KKE (6) June 2023 Greek legislative election - Municipal Units Results.png
Results, showing the winning party in each municipal unit.
   ND (989)
   SYRIZA (18)
   PASOK (11)
   KKE (6)
Results, showing the best-placed party in each municipal unit, other than New Democracy. June 2023 Greek legislative election - Municipal Units Results - 2.png
Results, showing the best-placed party in each municipal unit, other than New Democracy.
Greece Parliament June 2023.svg
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
New Democracy 2,115,32240.56158+12
Syriza 930,01317.8347–24
PASOK – Movement for Change 617,48711.8432–9
Communist Party of Greece 401,2247.6921–5
Spartans 243,9224.6812New
Greek Solution 231,4914.4412–4
Victory 193,1243.7010+10
Course of Freedom 165,5233.178+8
MeRA25 130,3782.5000
Patriotic Coalition 25,8580.500New
Voice of Logic 22,3470.430New
Ecologist Greens – Green Unity 21,1880.4100
EY Movement 17,1810.330New
Antarsya 15,8870.3000
Prasino+Mov 15,7250.300New
Breath of Democracy 14,7810.2800
Union of Centrists 14,2860.2700
Movement of the Poor of Greece 13,6520.2600
Communist Party of Greece (Marxist–Leninist) 9,4200.1800
Assembly of Greeks 6,4080.1200
Marxist–Leninist Communist Party of Greece 4,2500.0800
National Front 2,9650.060New
Organisation of Internationalist Communists of Greece 1,3740.0300
Organization for the Reconstruction of the KKE 1,1040.0200
Vision of the Renaissance of Greece 1320.000New
Panathinaikos Movement 1220.0000
Digital Hellenism in the Whole 230.000New
People's European Party 170.000New
Republican Party of Greece – TRAMP 30.000New
Greek Ecologists 00.0000
Independents00.0000
Total5,215,207100.003000
Valid votes5,215,20798.89
Invalid votes32,2190.61
Blank votes26,2730.50
Total votes5,273,699100.00
Registered voters/turnout9,813,59553.74
Source: Ministry of Interior

By region

ConstituencyNDSYRIZAPASOKKKESpartansELNIKIPEMERA25
%±%±%±%±%±%±%±%±%±
Achaea 34.04Increase2.svg 0.0923.20Decrease2.svg 3.8113.70Increase2.svg 1.287.57Increase2.svg 0.774.19New3.90Increase2.svg 0.224.33Increase2.svg 0.613.51Increase2.svg 0.582.38Decrease2.svg 0.12
Aetolia-Acarnania 38.85Decrease2.svg 0.6321.64Decrease2.svg 4.2014.20Increase2.svg 0.677.09Increase2.svg 0.815.01New2.81Increase2.svg 0.303.96Increase2.svg 0.932.23Increase2.svg 0.501.60Decrease2.svg 0.09
Argolis 43.28Decrease2.svg 0.2515.25Decrease2.svg 2.5015.01Decrease2.svg 0.585.26Increase2.svg 0.145.39New3.87Increase2.svg 0.233.43Increase2.svg 0.582.52Increase2.svg 0.242.47Decrease2.svg 0.46
Arcadia 41.51Increase2.svg 0.7816.86Decrease2.svg 2.2816.28Decrease2.svg 1.566.50Increase2.svg 0.064.47New3.67Increase2.svg 0.462.86Increase2.svg 0.842.84Increase2.svg 0.641.85Decrease2.svg 0.12
Arta 37.50Increase2.svg 0.8628.94Decrease2.svg 2.8110.84Decrease2.svg 0.127.65Increase2.svg 0.153.58New2.62Increase2.svg 0.212.36Increase2.svg 0.451.79Increase2.svg 0.292.10Decrease2.svg 0.32
Athens A 43.27Increase2.svg 1.0919.97Decrease2.svg 2.586.86Increase2.svg 0.168.90Increase2.svg 0.304.22New2.95Decrease2.svg 0.072.63Increase2.svg 0.673.39Increase2.svg 0.044.03Increase2.svg 0.43
Athens B1 47.32Increase2.svg 1.3016.95Decrease2.svg 1.817.64Increase2.svg 0.248.98Increase2.svg 0.353.08New2.64Decrease2.svg 0.052.73Increase2.svg 0.663.42Increase2.svg 0.243.71Increase2.svg 0.21
Athens B2 34.66Increase2.svg 0.2021.13Decrease2.svg 1.608.92Increase2.svg 0.1212.14Increase2.svg 0.745.02New4.02Decrease2.svg 0.072.81Increase2.svg 0.574.05Increase2.svg 0.043.05Decrease2.svg 0.27
Athens B3 42.32Increase2.svg 0.7618.66Decrease2.svg 1.887.91Increase2.svg 0.3710.17Increase2.svg 0.493.76New3.35Decrease2.svg 0.012.73Increase2.svg 0.673.68Increase2.svg 0.243.57Increase2.svg 0.16
East Attica 46.66Increase2.svg 1.1517.62Steady2.svg 0.008.00Decrease2.svg 0.157.19Increase2.svg 0.334.88New4.60Decrease2.svg 0.293.18Increase2.svg 0.843.63Increase2.svg 0.312.60Decrease2.svg 0.14
West Attica 39.74Decrease2.svg 2.1615.83Decrease2.svg 2.378.04Increase2.svg 0.6110.11Increase2.svg 0.987.61New5.95Decrease2.svg 0.743.44Increase2.svg 0.883.15Increase2.svg 0.061.87Decrease2.svg 0.32
Boeotia 37.12Decrease2.svg 0.1418.31Decrease2.svg 2.5414.07Increase2.svg 0.108.89Decrease2.svg 0.015.37New4.35Increase2.svg 0.353.42Increase2.svg 0.793.12Increase2.svg 0.302.05Decrease2.svg 0.22
Cephalonia 38.15Increase2.svg 1.4819.69Decrease2.svg 6.3910.44Increase2.svg 0.7012.36Increase2.svg 1.414.90New2.92Steady2.svg 0.001.96Increase2.svg 0.903.86Increase2.svg 0.331.96Decrease2.svg 0.77
Chalkidiki 39.54Decrease2.svg 0.3813.70Decrease2.svg 1.5714.52Increase2.svg 0.474.67Increase2.svg 0.085.55New6.30Decrease2.svg 0.496.56Increase2.svg 1.173.13Increase2.svg 0.192.16Decrease2.svg 0.55
Chania 40.52Decrease2.svg 0.6318.44Decrease2.svg 2.2011.21Increase2.svg 0.298.42Increase2.svg 1.234.64New3.10Decrease2.svg 0.372.73Increase2.svg 0.793.71Increase2.svg 0.713.05Decrease2.svg 0.23
Chios 46.49Increase2.svg 0.3510.52Decrease2.svg 1.8419.89Increase2.svg 0.596.67Decrease2.svg 0.113.59New2.97Decrease2.svg 0.042.48Increase2.svg 0.762.40Increase2.svg 0.161.80Decrease2.svg 0.43
Corfu 36.74Decrease2.svg 0.3418.56Decrease2.svg 1.4312.06Decrease2.svg 0.268.74Increase2.svg 0.085.36New3.34Decrease2.svg 0.032.38Increase2.svg 0.626.39Increase2.svg 1.302.98Decrease2.svg 0.17
Corinthia 41.83Increase2.svg 0.2317.27Decrease2.svg 2.5813.66Decrease2.svg 0.484.37Increase2.svg 0.235.64New4.26Increase2.svg 0.294.39Increase2.svg 0.813.16Increase2.svg 0.412.32Decrease2.svg 0.14
Cyclades 46.68Decrease2.svg 0.8714.14Decrease2.svg 1.8112.44Increase2.svg 1.165.74Increase2.svg 0.113.99New3.93Increase2.svg 0.292.96Increase2.svg 0.723.75Increase2.svg 0.882.59Decrease2.svg 0.29
Dodecanese 46.97Decrease2.svg 2.9613.07Decrease2.svg 1.8214.52Increase2.svg 1.104.34Increase2.svg 0.345.81New4.46Decrease2.svg 0.163.03Increase2.svg 0.812.95Increase2.svg 0.151.56Decrease2.svg 0.27
Drama 39.39Decrease2.svg 0.0213.27Decrease2.svg 0.6215.25Decrease2.svg 1.684.07Increase2.svg 0.146.01New6.83Decrease2.svg 0.076.33Increase2.svg 1.002.98Increase2.svg 0.062.03Decrease2.svg 0.08
Elis 37.45Decrease2.svg 0.2420.13Decrease2.svg 3.7819.74Increase2.svg 0.455.48Increase2.svg 0.484.59New3.77Increase2.svg 0.412.20Increase2.svg 0.682.88Increase2.svg 0.761.27Decrease2.svg 0.11
Euboea 38.63Increase2.svg 1.4717.77Decrease2.svg 1.0812.99Decrease2.svg 2.247.64Increase2.svg 0.505.30New4.89Decrease2.svg 0.333.21Increase2.svg 0.953.89Increase2.svg 0.472.18Decrease2.svg 0.30
Evros 44.18Increase2.svg 0.8715.00Decrease2.svg 3.6712.56Increase2.svg 0.223.78Decrease2.svg 0.105.46New8.72Steady2.svg 0.003.47Increase2.svg 0.651.76Increase2.svg 0.121.38Increase2.svg 0.23
Evrytania 41.22Decrease2.svg 3.9519.51Decrease2.svg 3.3115.98Increase2.svg 4.745.38Decrease2.svg 0.103.79New3.05Increase2.svg 0.144.43Increase2.svg 1.222.49Increase2.svg 0.941.76Decrease2.svg 0.03
Florina 34.42Decrease2.svg 3.7021.81Decrease2.svg 2.9315.12Increase2.svg 2.005.65Increase2.svg 0.764.31New5.13Increase2.svg 0.425.37Increase2.svg 1.352.34Increase2.svg 0.291.93Decrease2.svg 0.41
Grevena 39.81Decrease2.svg 4.5017.98Decrease2.svg 3.8716.47Increase2.svg 3.508.12Increase2.svg 1.244.19New3.80Increase2.svg 0.893.37Increase2.svg 0.872.10Increase2.svg 0.441.58Increase2.svg 0.06
Heraklion 35.16Decrease2.svg 0.3120.52Decrease2.svg 2.4122.98Increase2.svg 1.175.50Increase2.svg 0.383.77New2.23Decrease2.svg 0.022.03Increase2.svg 0.692.44Increase2.svg 0.682.51Decrease2.svg 0.39
Imathia 39.18Decrease2.svg 1.6914.73Decrease2.svg 2.9211.75Increase2.svg 0.425.98Increase2.svg 0.175.81New8.21Increase2.svg 0.405.48Increase2.svg 0.913.14Increase2.svg 0.311.79Decrease2.svg 0.15
Ioannina 38.71Increase2.svg 0.7822.42Decrease2.svg 1.9413.53Decrease2.svg 0.988.01Increase2.svg 0.863.49New3.06Increase2.svg 0.113.16Increase2.svg 0.682.18Increase2.svg 0.442.20Increase2.svg 0.05
Karditsa 43.09Decrease2.svg 3.2916.67Decrease2.svg 3.1416.58Increase2.svg 2.887.51Increase2.svg 0.244.88New2.82Increase2.svg 0.112.74Increase2.svg 0.861.71Increase2.svg 0.181.34Decrease2.svg 0.16
Kastoria 44.79Decrease2.svg 2.0516.61Decrease2.svg 4.3911.52Increase2.svg 2.914.09Increase2.svg 0.284.78New5.32Increase2.svg 0.264.99Increase2.svg 1.082.39Increase2.svg 0.222.33Decrease2.svg 0.18
Kavala 42.69Decrease2.svg 0.9614.15Decrease2.svg 2.0112.38Increase2.svg 1.055.58Increase2.svg 0.275.43New5.40Increase2.svg 0.035.53Increase2.svg 1.162.86Increase2.svg 0.282.08Decrease2.svg 0.35
Kilkis 39.63Decrease2.svg 0.9812.63Decrease2.svg 1.0214.32Decrease2.svg 3.026.69Increase2.svg 0.255.50New7.13Increase2.svg 0.206.98Increase2.svg 1.732.57Increase2.svg 0.111.61Decrease2.svg 0.21
Kozani 36.69Decrease2.svg 1.9417.48Decrease2.svg 3.2614.75Increase2.svg 1.547.26Increase2.svg 1.134.30New4.69Increase2.svg 0.216.27Increase2.svg 1.382.61Increase2.svg 0.362.11Decrease2.svg 0.15
Laconia 47.83Decrease2.svg 1.9512.80Decrease2.svg 1.0214.77Decrease2.svg 0.445.06Decrease2.svg 0.117.48New3.51Decrease2.svg 0.382.25Increase2.svg 0.562.38Decrease2.svg 0.221.41Decrease2.svg 0.25
Larissa 39.35Decrease2.svg 0.8817.53Decrease2.svg 2.3012.25Increase2.svg 0.349.29Increase2.svg 0.695.13New3.88Decrease2.svg 0.144.10Increase2.svg 0.792.57Increase2.svg 0.442.05Decrease2.svg 0.45
Lasithi 39.75Decrease2.svg 0.2314.62Decrease2.svg 3.1425.58Increase2.svg 4.104.76Increase2.svg 0.082.94New2.57Increase2.svg 0.212.08Increase2.svg 0.472.52Increase2.svg 0.292.36Decrease2.svg 0.34
Lefkada 41.71Decrease2.svg 0.7217.52Decrease2.svg 2.4012.39Increase2.svg 0.3911.80Increase2.svg 0.403.46New1.98Increase2.svg 0.341.91Increase2.svg 0.452.71Increase2.svg 0.582.92Increase2.svg 0.39
Lesbos 39.81Decrease2.svg 0.7013.49Decrease2.svg 2.4314.69Increase2.svg 0.1514.64Increase2.svg 1.644.11New3.47Increase2.svg 0.052.84Increase2.svg 0.682.06Increase2.svg 0.291.46Decrease2.svg 0.38
Magnesia 42.39Decrease2.svg 1.2017.25Decrease2.svg 1.999.37Increase2.svg 1.277.90Increase2.svg 0.684.90New4.09Increase2.svg 0.044.04Increase2.svg 0.913.67Increase2.svg 0.132.62Decrease2.svg 0.19
Messenia 43.71Decrease2.svg 0.5617.50Decrease2.svg 3.4811.14Increase2.svg 0.177.44Increase2.svg 0.695.96New3.81Decrease2.svg 0.172.59Increase2.svg 0.582.57Increase2.svg 0.482.28Decrease2.svg 0.17
Pella 38.41Decrease2.svg 2.6418.40Decrease2.svg 0.6212.49Decrease2.svg 0.583.75Decrease2.svg 0.025.13New7.65Increase2.svg 0.557.15Increase2.svg 1.022.65Increase2.svg 0.211.29Decrease2.svg 0.24
Phocis 44.65Decrease2.svg 1.5816.10Decrease2.svg 3.2111.60Increase2.svg 1.788.09Increase2.svg 0.084.58New3.65Increase2.svg 0.522.77Increase2.svg 0.873.11Increase2.svg 0.712.20Increase2.svg 0.27
Phthiotis 43.30Decrease2.svg 0.7517.57Decrease2.svg 3.3012.68Increase2.svg 1.317.24Increase2.svg 0.425.21New3.91Increase2.svg 0.033.05Increase2.svg 0.692.22Increase2.svg 0.161.67Decrease2.svg 0.17
Pieria 38.80Decrease2.svg 2.2913.63Decrease2.svg 1.7013.11Increase2.svg 0.675.13Decrease2.svg 0.075.56New7.00Decrease2.svg 0.569.26Increase2.svg 1.802.63Increase2.svg 0.191.67Decrease2.svg 0.39
Piraeus A 47.27Decrease2.svg 1.2816.58Decrease2.svg 1.616.70Increase2.svg 0.778.02Increase2.svg 0.584.57New3.54Increase2.svg 0.043.08Increase2.svg 0.823.92Increase2.svg 0.312.57Steady2.svg 0.00
Piraeus B 37.24Decrease2.svg 0.2019.36Decrease2.svg 1.397.60Increase2.svg 0.1911.49Increase2.svg 0.665.60New4.53Decrease2.svg 0.173.01Increase2.svg 0.674.41Increase2.svg 0.132.54Decrease2.svg 0.39
Preveza 41.58Decrease2.svg 0.6120.95Decrease2.svg 2.4915.01Increase2.svg 1.127.92Increase2.svg 0.533.78New2.64Increase2.svg 0.301.83Increase2.svg 0.581.89Increase2.svg 0.351.84Increase2.svg 0.03
Rethymno 36.67Decrease2.svg 0.4318.71Decrease2.svg 2.3225.71Increase2.svg 4.244.08Decrease2.svg 0.362.99New2.20Increase2.svg 0.102.78Increase2.svg 0.322.63Increase2.svg 0.221.69Decrease2.svg 0.33
Rhodope 28.89Increase2.svg 1.8333.60Increase2.svg 0.4219.00Decrease2.svg 3.633.16Decrease2.svg 0.393.13New4.13Decrease2.svg 0.072.65Increase2.svg 0.781.34Increase2.svg 0.231.42Decrease2.svg 0.56
Samos 36.05Decrease2.svg 0.4714.88Decrease2.svg 2.719.93Increase2.svg 1.0017.69Increase2.svg 1.173.85New5.18Decrease2.svg 0.972.17Increase2.svg 0.733.35Increase2.svg 0.842.44Steady2.svg 0.00
Serres 45.64Decrease2.svg 1.3412.88Decrease2.svg 1.9011.45Increase2.svg 0.535.02Increase2.svg 0.245.17New7.24Increase2.svg 0.274.69Increase2.svg 0.592.60Increase2.svg 0.231.68Decrease2.svg 0.18
Thesprotia 43.33Increase2.svg 0.6719.13Decrease2.svg 3.5415.07Increase2.svg 0.305.83Increase2.svg 0.343.86New2.89Increase2.svg 0.312.34Increase2.svg 0.582.21Increase2.svg 0.481.77Decrease2.svg 0.04
Thessaloniki A 35.28Increase2.svg 1.1317.52Decrease2.svg 2.188.14Increase2.svg 0.208.17Increase2.svg 0.735.03New7.97Decrease2.svg 0.385.36Increase2.svg 0.784.44Decrease2.svg 0.083.36Increase2.svg 0.04
Thessaloniki B 40.11Increase2.svg 0.0413.58Decrease2.svg 1.579.85Decrease2.svg 0.326.62Increase2.svg 0.425.29New7.95Increase2.svg 0.026.49Increase2.svg 0.863.78Increase2.svg 0.112.27Decrease2.svg 0.18
Trikala 41.40Decrease2.svg 3.6117.18Decrease2.svg 2.9114.86Increase2.svg 2.688.60Increase2.svg 1.003.97New2.94Increase2.svg 0.294.44Increase2.svg 1.091.85Increase2.svg 0.401.64Decrease2.svg 0.20
Xanthi 30.32Decrease2.svg 5.5728.49Increase2.svg 1.9518.36Increase2.svg 0.103.22Increase2.svg 0.384.40New3.98Decrease2.svg 0.043.16Increase2.svg 0.372.19Increase2.svg 0.541.62Decrease2.svg 0.30
Zakynthos 39.21Decrease2.svg 1.7516.40Decrease2.svg 4.5013.47Increase2.svg 2.6012.82Increase2.svg 2.015.17New2.88Increase2.svg 0.381.87Increase2.svg 0.332.92Increase2.svg 0.932.22Decrease2.svg 0.17

See also

Related Research Articles

Greece is a parliamentary representative democratic republic, where the President of Greece is the head of state and the Prime Minister of Greece is the head of government within a multi-party system. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Hellenic Parliament. Between the restoration of democracy in 1974 and the Greek government-debt crisis, the party system was dominated by the liberal-conservative New Democracy and the social-democratic PASOK. Since 2012, the anti-austerity, democratic socialist party Syriza has taken the place of PASOK as the largest left wing party, with their first election victory in January 2015.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">PASOK</span> Greek political party

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. In the June 2023 Greek legislative election it once again held firm on to its position of one of the ”big three” political parties of Greece.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Democracy (Greece)</span> Greek centre-right political party

New Democracy is a liberal-conservative political party in Greece. In contemporary Greek politics, New Democracy has been the main centre-right 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.

At a national level, Greece holds elections for its legislature, the Hellenic Parliament.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antonis Samaras</span> Prime Minister of Greece (2012–2015)

Antonis Samaras is a Greek politician who served as 14th Prime Minister of Greece from 2012 to 2015. A 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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kyriakos Mitsotakis</span> Prime Minister of Greece

Kyriakos Mitsotakis is a Greek politician who has been prime minister of Greece since June 2023 and before from July 2019 to May 2023. He is president of the New Democracy party since 2016. On 26 June 2023, Mitsotakis won a second term as prime minister after winning the June 2023 Greek legislative election. Mitsotakis previously was Leader of the Opposition from 2016 to 2019, and Minister of Administrative Reform from 2013 to 2015. He is the son of the late Konstantinos Mitsotakis, who was Prime Minister of Greece from 1990 to 1993. He was first elected to the Hellenic Parliament for the Athens B constituency in 2004. After New Democracy suffered two election defeats in 2015, he was elected the party's leader in January 2016. Three years later, he led his party to a majority in the 2019 Greek legislative election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Syriza</span> Greek political party

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.

The terms Apostasia or Iouliana or the Royal Coup are used to describe the political crisis in Greece centered on the resignation, on 15 July 1965, of Prime Minister Georgios Papandreou and subsequent appointment, by King Constantine II, of successive prime ministers from Papandreou's own party, the Centre Union, to replace him. Defectors from the Center Union were branded by Papandreou's sympathizers as Apostates ("renegades"). The Apostasia heralded a prolonged period of political instability, which weakened the fragile post-civil war order, and ultimately led to the establishment of the military regime in April 1967.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 Greek legislative election</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Third Hellenic Republic</span> Current state of Greece, established after the fall of the Military Junta in 1974

The Third Hellenic Republic is the period in modern Greek history that stretches from 1974, with the fall of the Greek military junta and the final confirmation of the abolishment of the Greek monarchy, to the present day.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">May 2012 Greek legislative election</span>

Legislative elections were held in Greece on Sunday, 6 May 2012 to elect all 300 members to the Hellenic Parliament. It was scheduled to be held in late 2013, four years after the previous election; however, an early election was stipulated in the coalition agreement of November 2011 which formed the Papademos Cabinet. The coalition comprised both of Greece's traditional major political parties, PASOK on the left and New Democracy (ND) on the right, as well as the right-wing Popular Orthodox Rally (LAOS). The aim of the coalition was to relieve the Greek government-debt crisis by ratifying and implementing decisions taken with other Eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) a month earlier.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">June 2012 Greek legislative election</span>

Legislative elections were held in Greece on Sunday, 17 June 2012, to elect all 300 members to the Hellenic Parliament in accordance with the constitution, after all attempts to form a new government failed following the May elections. If all attempts to form a new government fail, the constitution directs the president to dissolve a newly elected parliament, and then to call for new parliamentary elections within 30 days of the dissolution. The president announced at 16 May the date for the new election, and signed the formal decree to dissolve the parliament and call for the election at 19 May.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">January 2015 Greek legislative election</span>

Legislative 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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">September 2015 Greek legislative election</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">2019 Greek legislative election</span>

Legislative elections were held in Greece on 7 July 2019. The elections were called by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on 26 May 2019 after the ruling Syriza party lost the European and local elections. They were the first national elections since the voting age was lowered to 17, and the number of parliamentary constituencies was increased from 56 to 59. Athens B, the largest constituency before the 2018 reforms, with 44 seats, was broken up into smaller constituencies, the largest of which had 18 seats.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Course of Freedom</span> Political party in Greece

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">MeRA25</span> Greek left-wing political party

The European Realistic Disobedience Front, or MeRA25, is a left-wing Greek political party founded in 2018. Its founder and General Secretary is former Syriza MP and Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis. MeRa25 is part of the Democracy in Europe Movement 2025 (DiEM25), the European Spring, and the Progressive International. Τhe movement sets the horizon for the year 2025 to draft a democratic constitution that will replace all the European treaties that are in force today. A party of the same name, allied with the Greek party, was founded in Germany in 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">May 2023 Greek legislative election</span> General election in Greece

Snap parliamentary elections were held in Greece on 21 May 2023. All 300 seats in the Hellenic Parliament were contested. They were the first elections since 1990 not to be held under a bonus seats system, due to amendments to the electoral law made in 2016. Instead, a purely proportional system was used.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Spartans (Greek political party)</span> Greek political party

Spartans is a far-right political party in Greece, founded in 2017 by Vasilis Stigkas. It is often described as far-right or extreme-right due to its strong connections with Golden Dawn.

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