The
elections to the Greek Parliament of June 17 were needed because after the
elections of May 6 no parties were able to form a coalition government. The
result, not unexpectedly, was a “victory” for the rightwing New Democracy (ND),
with 29.7% (compared to 18.9% from May 6). The left alliance SYRIZA rose from
16.8% (May 6) to 26.9%, but was again only the second strongest party. Thus,
the 50 “extra” seats in parliament, decisive for the formation of a government,
were captured by the now leading memoranda-party ND.
ND is
forced, however, to form a coalition government with the badly shrunken and
discredited ex-social democratic PASOK, the third strongest party, with 12.3%
(a decrease of 0. 9%). DIMAR, the right-wing split from the SYN-party (the
leading force in SYRIZA), will also be involved in the new government. DIMAR
polled 6.3% (+0.2%) and is thus the sixth strongest party. For the first time,
DIMAR openly takes over responsibility for the memoranda policies. The
“Independent Greeks,” a spin-off of ND, who refuse to support the memoranda
policies, achieved a fourth place finish once again, with 7.5% (- 3.1).
The
neo-Nazi gang of Chrysi Avgi (“Golden Dawn,” GM) is now in fifth place, with
6.9% (- 0.1). The stabilization of the neo-Nazis is even more remarkable since
their terrorist character was openly revealed in the weeks after the May 6
vote, with open attacks on immigrants and leftist politicians using knives and
clubs—in full public view. Nobody can say any longer that the voters do not know
what they were voting for.
The
Communist Party (KKE) received just 4.5% and lost 4% compared to May. All
parties below the 3% threshold on May 6 had high losses and became almost
insignificant for the outcome of these elections, including LAOS with 1.6% (- 1.3), “Dimourgia Xana”
with 1.6% (- 0.6), the “Green Ecologists” with 0.9% (- 2.0), and [the far-left
coalition] ANTARSYA with 0.33% (- 0.9). The valid votes cast represented 61.5%
of the electorate (- 1.2), again significantly lower than ever before.
A closer
look at the election result shows that the shift between “right” and “left”
compared to May 6 is not very big. The right-wing parties (from ND to GM)
together polled 47.3%. The percentage of PASOK as a “new” right-wing party
should be added to this. The left received altogether 39%, taking into account
also DIMAR and the Greens. The memoranda-parties, so far ND and PASOK, but now
DIMAR too, scored together 48.3%, and of course have a clear majority in
Parliament. In accordance with the rules of bourgeois parliamentarism, this
might be interpreted as providing a “democratic mandate” for the continuation
of the memoranda policies. Nevertheless, this “mandate” is, even in a formal
sense, quite weak.
ND’s
”success” must be partially attributed to the unprecedented propaganda campaign
of the memoranda parties and the mass media in Greece and other European countries,
according to which an electoral victory of the left would have meant Greece’s immediate exit from the euro, the
absolute economic ruin of the country, the termination of all payments etc. In
addition, ND was able to attract most of the traditional right electorate that
was very fragmented on May 6.
Nonetheless,
the election results of ND are generally weak, reflecting a historic downward
trend that will continue now with ND’s role as the leading government party. On
the left, the SYRIZA party or alliance could establish itself as the clear
leading force primarily because had it come in first this would have held out
the prospect of a “left government.”
Situation
of the left
As for the
left-wing parties or alliances and their prospects, it should be noted that the
slogan “Elections now!” issued by the two leading reformist parties, KKE and
SYRIZA, especially since the great general strike of October 2011, represents a
strategic failure. It was not possible to stop the memoranda policies through
parliamentary elections.
The
relative strengthening of the Left as a whole in the two elections was the
result of the large mobilizations of social resistance from May 2010, with its
high points of June and October 2011 as well as Feb. 12. It must be understood
that the resistance was not strong enough to bring down the memoranda policies.
Thus it is not accidental that the strength or weakness of the entire left in
the elections reflects the real balance of power between the main classes in
Greek society. In this respect the election results are the political expression
of the temporary defeat of the resistance movement.
The
weakening of KKE in the elections can be partly explained by its resolute
“isolation tactics” along with its strict refusal to cooperate with other left
forces at any level. This is connected to a necessarily complete lack of any
prospect designed to end the prevailing policy, whether it be by strengthening
the resistance movement or by the (ultimately illusory) parliamentary path.
The SYRIZA
leadership has taken clear steps to carve out space as a “left” alliance for
the management of the existing political and social system—i.e. Greek
capitalism—at the government level, particularly after May 6. Still, it is
obvious that the ruling classes of Greece and the EU prefer to get along
without the services of SYRIZA in this regard.
The SYRIZA
leadership has fully accepted the logic of the Troika credits and their
principal legitimacy and thus the debt repayments, at the same time also the
wage and pension cuts and the general lowering of living standards imposed by
the first memorandum, as well as the prospect of remaining in the euro-zone.
These things were seen as the primary objective of government policy, thus
accepting the “legitimacy” of the extortionate dilemma posed by the ruling
classes. In this way, the main demand of last year’s movement “We owe nothing,
we do not pay, we do not sell!” was completely diluted, or turned into its
opposite.
On the
central issue of migration the SYRIZA leadership succumbed in large part to the
prevailing policies and declared immigrants to be a “problem.” The SYRIZA
leadership has not said a single word about how the social resistance can be
put back on its feet or how the deadly threat posed by the neo-Nazi hordes can
be stopped.
For
ANTARSYA the election results of June 17 are almost tantamount to a collapse.
All of the weaknesses of this formation after May 6 have become blatantly
clear—for example, its lack of coherence at the central level as a result of an
inability to overcome the egoism of various organizations, the weakness of the
basic units of the local committees, an inability to confront the political
situation after May 6, to take a stand and respond clearly and convincingly to
the central issues.
ANTARSYA
must make the necessary self-criticism in the face of this defeat and draw the
appropriate conclusions. It can hardly continue if it fails to do so. Only in
this way will it be possible for ANTARSYA to develop as one of the main engines
of the resistance movement and as the anti-capitalist and revolutionary pole of
the left.
There is no
shortage of starting points for joint actions by the entire left in the spirit
of a united front policy. The programmatic perspective for the battles ahead
has, to a large degree, been correctly outlined by ANTARSYA. The class
struggles will undoubtedly sharpen in the coming months. This is what the
social resistance must prepare for.
> The article
above was written by Andreas Kloke, and is reprinted from the July 2012 print
edition of Socialist Action newspaper.
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