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September 22, 2015

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Triumphant Tsipras lists priorities

ALEXIS Tsipras said yesterday he would revive Greece’s banks and its crippled economy, while demanding debt relief from creditors in his “first big battle” following an unexpectedly clear election victory that returned him to office as prime minister.

Preparing to be sworn in for a second term, he set those priorities at the top of a dauntingly long “to do” list that also includes implementing austerity policies and dealing with waves of migrants landing on Greek shores.

In Sunday’s election, voters gave Tsipras and his Syriza party a second chance to tackle Greece’s problems, and with it the benefit of the doubt over a dramatic summer U-turn, when he ditched his anti-austerity platform to secure a new bailout and avert ‘Grexit’ — a Greek exit form the eurozone.

His immediate objective would be the full restoration of stability in the economy and Greek banks, a Syriza official quoted Tsipras as telling party officials. The banks were shut for three weeks and the wider economy set back sharply in July before Tsipras caved in to accept austerity terms and an 86-billion euro (US$96.29 billion) bailout. The official said Tsipras had also announced that his “first crucial battle” would be securing debt relief.

Tsipras has promised to implement the tax increases, spending cuts and market reforms mandated by creditors under the bailout program, which restrains much of his ability to set policy. But his party says there is still enough flexibility to cushion the impact on the most vulnerable Greeks.

Its election manifesto refers to “gray areas” in which details can still be adjusted, such as labor reforms pension cuts, and plans to tackle the non-performing loans that have crippled banks.

Syriza’s stronger-than-expected win secured it 145 of 300 parliamentary seats, meaning the party requires only one small coalition partner to form a government in Greece’s notoriously fractious legislature.

It will govern with the same junior party it teamed up with in January, the once stridently anti-bailout right-wing Independent Greeks, which won 10 seats. Its leader Panos Kammenos said Tsipras would announce his cabinet tomorrow.

That alliance gives Tsipras more authority to steer the implementation of the bailout than he might have enjoyed with a broader coalition. He says his victory gives him a mandate for a full four-year term, extraordinary in a country that has had five elections in six years.

 




 

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