Greek conservatives win big in local elections
June 2, 2019Greece's main opposition conservative party, New Democracy, repeated last week's success in European Parliament elections by dominating in runoff local elections on Sunday. The political group secured 12 of the country's 13 regions and won a majority of cities.
In Athens, Kostas Bakoyannis, son of former conservative mayor Dora Bakoyannis and nephew of opposition leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis, won with a 65% share of the vote to defeat a candidate backed by the ruling left-wing Syriza.
Prime Minister Alex Tsipras' party picked up less than a quarter of the vote last week, a result that led him to call for snap elections on July 7, three months earlier than scheduled, and crushed his dream of becoming the first Greek prime minister in three decades to see out a full term in office.
New Democracy won five of Greece's 13 regional district governorships in last week's first round of local voting — which ran alongside the European Parliament ballot — while the left took just one.
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Leftist firebrand
"We are calling on citizens to choose progressive mayoral and district candidates today ... against the representatives of conservatism," Tsipras said after casting his ballot in central Athens on Sunday.
"The former communist youth leader surged to power as a radical rabble-rouser, championing 'collision politics' against the Greek establishment and European austerity," DW's Athens correspondent Anthee Carasava reported.
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"Four years on, he has turned into a master of the mainstream, mutating and maturing into a lord of realism. So much so that many European leaders, including Angela Merkel, who once threatened to oust him from the eurozone, now praise him as a trusted and credible ally. They've even nominated him for a Nobel Prize for helping to turn Greece into a pillar of stability."
jsi/kw/amp (AP, AFP, Reuters)