Greece: the `1789’ moment - but via the ballot box rather than guillotine

26 January 2015

The people have spoken clearly and broken the mould of the ancient regime. In practice, Syriza should be able to govern adequately.

The exit polls are predicting an upheaval though the precise magnitude will only become clear as election results are declared formally. It may yet be that Syriza has not won an outright majority in the 300-seat Parliament. Nonetheless, the people have spoken clearly and broken the mould of the ancient regime.

At the moment of writing, the projections are that Syrizia will only get 150 seats - precisely half the number of seats in the Parliament, so short of an absolute majority. Providing party discipline can be maintained, what are the realistic chances of all the other MPs combining to block Syriza actions? Quite small - after considering the huge array of political views likely to be represented in the Parliament. In practice, Syriza should be able to govern adequately.

What EU policy events will happen next? 

Greek policy events:

Perhaps the biggest policy conundrum is how Syriza will deal with the oligarchs and other such vested interests – the `1789 moment’. The market economy approach might seem improbable from a “Communist fire-brand” but is that an accurate description of Tzipras? The smell of power has already caused some rapid re-positioning. The reality of power may now force further shifts – though perhaps tempered by the Syriza party’s membership. At first sight, none of this seems impossible for the EU to `wriggle’ its way round. The upside for the EU is immense: trigger a major revival of the Greek economy, banish fears of Grexit and demonstrate even further solidarity with those who finally may have elected a government that will deal with the actual problems.  Hope springs eternal, but this could be a game changer.

PS: An additional benefit - the advocates of `Brexit’ would find their arguments substantially undermined! 


© Graham Bishop