Exit polls
give the party, which denies it subscribes to neo-Nazi ideology, around a 10
per cent of the Greek vote
The
Guardian
By Fiona
Govan, Athens8:29PM BST 25 May 2014
Golden
Dawn, Greece’s extreme Right party, looked set to enter the European Parliament
for the first time after winning between 9 and 10 per cent of the vote, exit
polls showed on Sunday.
The party,
which denies accusations that it is a criminal organisation following neo-Nazi ideology,
was Greece ’s third most
popular party in the election and looked set to send three MEPs to Brussels .
“Golden
Dawn is the third political power in Greece , it’s the only party that
shows such a steep rise,” said Ilias Kasidiaris, the Golden Dawn spokesman who
is known to have a swastika tattoo on his upper arm, at party headquarters
following publication of exit polls.
Speaking
next to the party flag – an ancient Greek symbol which has been likened to the
Nazi flag – he delivered a message from Nikos Michaloliakos, the party leader
and a member of Greek Parliament who is currently in jail pending trial for
involvement in a criminal gang.
“I
congratulate you for managing to resist the government’s terrorism and for not
believing their lies,” the message read. “We are the only political power that
actually stands up against our state being run by foreign powers. New Democracy
paid the price for their policies against our people and their lies and Syriza
has failed to express the public anger.
“Golden Dawn
is now the third pole in the political life of the country. Our slogan was the
thieves should be in prison and the money they embezzled returned to the people
but the thieves managed to put us in jail. They tried to dig a grave for us but
they fell in it themselves.”
The message
went on to reiterate the main demands of the party which include cancelling the
EU bail-out agreement for Greece
and dealing with the problem of illegal immigration.
The extreme
Right party, which has even been shunned by Marine Le Pen’s Front National and
far Right Dutch leader Geert Wilders, had sought to soften its image and move
away from fascist rhetoric in the run up to the election, after a government
crackdown on the party saw members accused of belonging to a criminal gang and
thrown in jail.
Card
carrying members of the party were blamed for participating in hit squads
patrolling the streets in black shirts to attack immigrants in the capital’s
most rundown areas as well as racketeering and extortion.
Several
high profile members were found to have Nazi memorabilia in their homes but
analysts insist that the majority of their voters chose the party as a “protest
vote” and not because they endorsed their “fascist ideology”.
In what was
widely seen as a referendum on the handling of Greece ’s four year debt crisis,
voters punished the coalition government of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras in
its first major test since its election two years ago.
The
government suffered a setback when Greece ’s radical leftist party,
Syriza, which ran on an anti-bail-out ticket, won the majority of votes in the
European election but the biggest opposition party failed to deliver the killer
blow it was hoping for.
In the run
up to elections the ruling coalition of centre right New Democracy and centre
left Pasok had warned of the danger of voters casting a protest vote and
delivering an overwhelming victory to the opposition.
It was
feared that an overwhelming victory by Syriza – one that saw them win more
votes than the coalition parties combined – could provoke early parliamentary
elections and thrust Greece
into political turmoil and destabilise its fragile economic recovery.
But the EU
ballot handed Syriza only a four-point lead according to exit polls, with the
co-ruling Pasok party confounding predictions of a meltdown when they secured a
respectable 7 to 9 per cent of the vote.
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