Greece Moves to Outlaw the Golden Dawn
Party
By ALKMAN
GRANITSAS and NEKTARIA STAMOULI
ATHENS—Greece's
crackdown on the country's far-right Golden Dawn party, with the weekend arrest
of the group's top leadership, is a needed fillip for Prime Minister Antonis
Samaras's fragile coalition government.
But the
boost may be temporary if the social problems that fueled the group's
rise—unemployment, corruption, collapsing public services—aren't soon addressed
by a government not many Greeks support, analysts say. And correcting those
issues could take some time.
"There
will be some political gains for the government and particularly Mr. Samaras,
but after that, if the economy continues to stumble, those benefits will
evaporate and the Golden Dawn phenomenon will return," said John Dimakis,
a political analyst at Athens-based consultancy STR. "The crackdown on
Golden Dawn won't bring jobs, or investments, or growth. And Golden Dawn is an
expression of social needs that the political system right now can't
cover."