Nikos Chrysoloras Paul Tugwell Antonis
Galanopoulos
September 13, 2015 — 4:57 PM EEST
Bloomberg
Greece’s
campaign for Sept. 20 elections enters its final stretch this week with polls
showing the outcome too close to call, threatening fractious coalition
negotiations that may delay or derail implementation of the terms of a bailout
only sealed in July.
With Syriza
leader Alexis Tsipras and his New Democracy opponent Evangelos Meimarakis
running neck-and-neck, pollsters say the result of Greece’s third national
ballot this year could come down to turnout, undecided voters or a televised
debate between the two frontrunners.
“The
question of the previous election, in January, was whether Tsipras’s Syriza
party will win an outright majority,” Thomas Gerakis, head of Athens-based Marc
pollsters, said in an interview on Sept. 10. “The question in this election is
which one is going to win, and also the ranking of the other parties.”