* Early
presidential vote surprised Greek establishment
* But
Samaras discussed plans with Berlin , Brussels
*
Government candidate falls short in first round
* Previous
premier caused uproar with referendum plan
By Renee
Maltezou and Lefteris Papadimas
Samaras's
decision last week to bring the three-stage parliamentary vote forward to this
month from February took the Greek establishment and financial markets by
surprise.
But a
select few knew it was coming, among them German Finance Minister Wolfgang
Schaeuble. With Berlin playing a decisive role
in European aid for Greece ,
Samaras and Schaeuble spoke repeatedly by telephone in the days before the early
vote was announced on Dec. 8, according to a euro zone official with direct
knowledge of the talks.
They
discussed details of Greece 's
international bailout, which Samaras wants to pull out of a year ahead of
schedule. They also talked about bringing forward the vote, this person said,
even though the conservative premier has yet to secure a majority of lawmakers
for the government's candidate.
In the
first round on Wednesday, the government candidate fell well short of the
required majority. Further rounds are scheduled for Dec. 23 and 29.
The role of
the Greek president is largely ceremonial but if parliament fails to elect a
head of state, early national elections must be called. Opinion polls suggest
the left-wing anti-bailout Syriza party would win.
With Greece 's
economic recovery still fragile, political uncertainty could rattle investors'
confidence as it tries to leave the painful European Union/IMF bailout. Samaras
is betting that the fear of upheaval will win over opposition lawmakers.
Samaras's
tactic of making a bet to save his government and career, while not alienating
euro zone colleagues, reflects Greece 's
still precarious position within the currency bloc.
LEARNING
THE HARD WAY
Amid the
uproar, Papandreou dropped the idea but it still helped to drag Europe into a fresh bout of market turmoil.
This time
around, Greek officials were more careful.
For several
months, Greece
has been undergoing a final inspection by international creditors who have lent
it 240 billion euros ($300 billion) since 2010. The talks have included the
details of how Athens
would exit the bailout programme. This was originally planned for early 2016,
but Samaras wanted to push that forward to end of this year.
The talks
got stuck on various points, including the need for more budget-trimming.
Samaras and deputy premier Evangelos Venizelos realised they could not wrap up
the inspection unless the outcome of the presidential vote was clear, say Greek
officials with knowledge of the talks.
The
government candidate, former European Commissioner Stavros Dimas, needs the
votes of 180 lawmakers in the 300-seat parliament to be elected, but on
Wednesday got only 160.
ROLLING
BACK ON COMMITMENTS
Failure
would force parliamentary elections resulting possibly in a Syriza-led
government that could roll back any commitments made by Samaras to end the
bailout.
Venizelos,
in particular, was keen to abandon the official timeline, one Greek official
said. In the week before the announcement, Athens felt the review was being held
"hostage" to political uncertainty, leading to demands such as a
lowering of the minimum pension, another Greek government official said.
That held
up the review and the year-end bailout exit, and meant Samaras would not arrive
at the previously-scheduled February presidential vote with the political
victory of having pulled Greece
out of the unpopular programme.
"As
long as there was no visibility for this country, the lenders would not
conclude the review," Public Administration Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis
said last week.
Moreover,
the IMF and EU were seeking new measures to balance next year's budget. Asking
lawmakers to vote on austerity and then go to a presidential vote would have
been political suicide for Samaras, Greek officials said.
Proponents
of a December vote argued this would present lawmakers with a choice: choose
the government and effectively allow Samaras to complete the bailout exit, or
have snap elections. The Greek official said this offered the best shot of
winning over enough lawmakers from a pool of 24 unaligned lawmakers and another
22 from two small parties - some of whom would be likely to lose their seats.
On Dec. 7,
Samaras made up his mind after euro zone ministers agreed to extend the bailout
to the end of February.
Now he
secured European cover. Following the Schaeuble contacts, Samaras discussed an
early vote with other leaders, including European Commission President
Jean-Claude Juncker, according to one official.
The next
day, a rainy Monday, Venizelos and Samaras finalised their plan. A Greek
government spokeswoman declined to comment on Samaras's conversations but said
the decision was made because "the review with lenders could not be
concluded". ($1 = 0.8059 euros) (Writing by Deepa Babington; Editing by
Alessandra Galloni and David Stamp)
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