Nikos Chrysoloras Eleni Chrepa
September
7, 2015 — 7:00 AM EEST
Bloomberg
Evangelos
Meimarakis, leader of the opposition New Democracy party, said he’ll invite his
rival Alexis Tsipras to form a coalition to safeguard Greece ’s place
in the euro area, no matter the outcome of this month’s vote.
“I believe
in consensus and cooperation,” Meimarakis, 61, said in a Bloomberg television
interview on Sunday. “We have proven throughout these years that when it’s for
the good of the country, for safeguarding its place in the euro area, we’re
willing to cooperate.”
Opinion
polls over the weekend showed the third ballot in Greece this year is too close
to call as Tsipras’ Syriza party is tied with New Democracy. No party is
projected to gain enough votes for an outright parliamentary majority,
signaling coalition talks may be needed. The prospect of messy negotiations
could further complicate the implementation of conditions set out for the third
bailout to stave off the crisis and the recapitalization of banks.
Tsipras
stepped down on Aug. 20 just after relying on opposition votes to gain
parliamentary backing of the country’s third bailout. His resignation was a bid
to recoup a majority with snap elections as his party fell into disarray and
dissidents formed a splinter group. Tsipras last month said that his choice to
opt for a compromise with creditors in the face of internal dissent was
necessary to avert the “national disaster” of expulsion from the euro. Stocks
have plunged since markets reopened in August.
Every poll
over the past week has Syriza and New Democracy within the margin of error,
including an MRB survey on Saturday in Parapolitika newspaper that gave New
Democracy a 0.6 percentage point lead, and a Marc poll published the next day
in To Ethnos daily that had Syriza ahead by 0.4 percentage point.
Meimarakis
said European leaders are wrong if they are betting that Tsipras offers the
best hope of keeping the region’s common currency area together.
Government
officials in Paris and Berlin last week said the Syriza leader has built up
trust with President Francois Hollande and Chancellor Angela Merkel over months
of late-night sessions as they worked on a deal to secure Greece’s future in
the euro.
“Even if
Tsipras wins the election, which he will not, he will face similar internal
dissent problems each time he brings a law implementing the bailout agreement,”
Meimarakis said. “The danger of Grexit hasn’t passed, and if we end up in an
unstable situation, this danger will become more imminent.”
New
Democracy would instead safeguard the implementation of the bailout agreement
and pass needed reforms, Meimarakis, who succeeded Antonis Samaras, said from
his office on Syggrou Avenue ,
in Athens .
New Democracy,
along with the Pasok and River parties, backed Tsipras’ 86 billion euros ($96
billion) bailout deal, after about a quarter of Syriza’s lawmakers staged a
mutiny against its terms. The country has had seven prime ministers in the past
six years.
“There was
no need to hold snap elections and Mr. Tsipras owes an explanation for putting
the country into this adventure, and bringing uncertainty and instability
during the most crucial moment in the implementation of the program,” said
Meimarakis. “It’s disastrous to hold elections every six months.”
Tsipras is Europe ’s “pampered kid” after he went “crying” to seek
the bailout,” Meimarakis said. “It’s one thing to be a good kid, and quite
another to be a statesman.”
So strong
is his belief in Europe that Meimarakis said
he would forgo any leaderships claims, even if he wins the elections, if that’s
seen as needed to form a credible coalition.
“Tsipras
has called us assassins of society, traitors; he used derogatory expressions
against us,” Meimarakis said. “Despite this, we backed him when we thought the
country’s European prospect was at stake.”
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