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- 2005-12-07
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只要35.5% , 左派就可以当权。
我眼前就看到了10月19日后,$15最低工资, 10万绿教开进加拿大的场景。
Official projection of final result shows Syriza winning Greek election with 35.5 per cent
If results hold, parties will have to form coalition in order to govern
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/greece-vote-tsipras-1.3235640
The official projection of final results in Greece's early election shows the left-wing Syriza party of former Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras winning with 35.5 per cent, but falling short of enough parliamentary seats to form a government on its own.
New Democracy head Vangelis Meimarakis earlier conceded defeat and called for a government to be formed quickly.
"The election result appears to be forming comprehensively with Syriza and Mr. Tsipras coming first," Meimarakis said. "I congratulate him and call on him to form the government that is necessary, and bring the [proposal] to parliament."
During the campaign, Meimarakis had said his party would join Syriza in a national unity government — something Tsipras has repeatedly ruled out.
A total of eight parties appeared set to win parliamentary seats, including Syriza's former governing coalition partner, the small nationalist Independent Greeks. The new anti-bailout Popular Unity party, formed by rebel Syriza members who objected to Tsipras' agreement to a third bailout for Greece were projected as falling just shy of the 3 per cent threshold for parliamentary seats.
'Why should we vote?'
On Saturday in Athens, officials at the ballot table at one polling station told Reuters only 37 out of 530 registered voters had cast votes; at another 51 out of 512 had done so.
Broadcaster ERT, meanwhile, said one polling station in an Athens suburb recorded only 25 voters in the first three hours.
Greeks voted in a parliamentary election in January, propelling Tsipras into power, and then again in July in a referendum on whether to accept a new bailout from international lenders along with more austerity.
Conservative New Democracy Leader Vangelis Meimarakis talk to the media after voting for the general election in Athens on Sunday. (Dimitris Michalakis/Reuters)
Although Greeks chose overwhelmingly to reject the bailout, Tsipras was forced to accept a somewhat harsher one or face ejection from the eurozone.
Architect Yannis Tsakalos, 51, said a combination of this and the fact that he felt New Democracy was part of the political system that caused Greece's debt problems, was prompting him to vote for someone else.
"Both have failed in my view," he said. "We saw certified incompetence by Syriza and New Democracy does not deserve being rewarded."
Others were unsure it was worth voting at all.
"People are tired, we showed Tsipras how much we were with him at the referendum and then he signed anyway," said Eleni, a hotel receptionist on the island of Kalymnos.
"If [the politicians] promise something different and then do the same as the others, why should we vote? We don't know what we're voting for anymore."
Supporters of left-wing Syriza party watch the first exit polls in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki. (Giannis PapanikoséAssociated Press)
我眼前就看到了10月19日后,$15最低工资, 10万绿教开进加拿大的场景。
Official projection of final result shows Syriza winning Greek election with 35.5 per cent
If results hold, parties will have to form coalition in order to govern
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/greece-vote-tsipras-1.3235640
The official projection of final results in Greece's early election shows the left-wing Syriza party of former Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras winning with 35.5 per cent, but falling short of enough parliamentary seats to form a government on its own.
- Greek bailout approved by German parliament
- Greece crisis: Euro finance ministers approve €26B as part of bailout
- Greece crisis: Parliament approves draft 3rd bailout after all-night debate
New Democracy head Vangelis Meimarakis earlier conceded defeat and called for a government to be formed quickly.
"The election result appears to be forming comprehensively with Syriza and Mr. Tsipras coming first," Meimarakis said. "I congratulate him and call on him to form the government that is necessary, and bring the [proposal] to parliament."
During the campaign, Meimarakis had said his party would join Syriza in a national unity government — something Tsipras has repeatedly ruled out.
A total of eight parties appeared set to win parliamentary seats, including Syriza's former governing coalition partner, the small nationalist Independent Greeks. The new anti-bailout Popular Unity party, formed by rebel Syriza members who objected to Tsipras' agreement to a third bailout for Greece were projected as falling just shy of the 3 per cent threshold for parliamentary seats.
'Why should we vote?'
On Saturday in Athens, officials at the ballot table at one polling station told Reuters only 37 out of 530 registered voters had cast votes; at another 51 out of 512 had done so.
Broadcaster ERT, meanwhile, said one polling station in an Athens suburb recorded only 25 voters in the first three hours.
Greeks voted in a parliamentary election in January, propelling Tsipras into power, and then again in July in a referendum on whether to accept a new bailout from international lenders along with more austerity.
Conservative New Democracy Leader Vangelis Meimarakis talk to the media after voting for the general election in Athens on Sunday. (Dimitris Michalakis/Reuters)
Although Greeks chose overwhelmingly to reject the bailout, Tsipras was forced to accept a somewhat harsher one or face ejection from the eurozone.
Architect Yannis Tsakalos, 51, said a combination of this and the fact that he felt New Democracy was part of the political system that caused Greece's debt problems, was prompting him to vote for someone else.
"Both have failed in my view," he said. "We saw certified incompetence by Syriza and New Democracy does not deserve being rewarded."
Others were unsure it was worth voting at all.
"People are tired, we showed Tsipras how much we were with him at the referendum and then he signed anyway," said Eleni, a hotel receptionist on the island of Kalymnos.
"If [the politicians] promise something different and then do the same as the others, why should we vote? We don't know what we're voting for anymore."
Supporters of left-wing Syriza party watch the first exit polls in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki. (Giannis PapanikoséAssociated Press)
