Mitsotakis seeks second Greek elections-Xinhua

Mitsotakis seeks second Greek elections

Source: Xinhua| 2023-05-23 02:12:45|Editor: huaxia

ATHENS, May 22 (Xinhua) -- Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis decided on Monday to return the exploratory mandate he had received from President Katerina Sakellaropoulou to form a government following this weekend's inconclusive elections.

During their meeting, he called for a second ballot to be held as early as June 25 if possible, according to an e-mailed press release.

In Sunday's general elections, the ruling conservative New Democracy (ND) party scored a landslide victory winning 40.79 percent of the votes and thus 146 seats in parliament. The main opposition party, SYRIZA-Progressive Alliance, garnered 20.7 percent of the votes with 71 seats.

However, the ND failed to secure an outright majority in the 300-member parliament.

After the speaker of parliament formally delivered the results to Sakellaropoulou, she launched the procedure foreseen by the country's Constitution, granting the first three-day mandate to the leader of the winning party.

"I think that essentially the conditions for the formation of a government from the present parliament do not exist," Mitsotakis told Sakellaropoulou.

Hours later, he called the president and told her that he wanted to return the mandate, according to a press release.

Sakellaropoulou will now grant three-day mandates to the leaders of the second and third-placed parties, the SYRIZA-Progressive Alliance and the socialist PASOK-KINAL, which received 11.46 percent of the votes with 41 seats.

She will receive SYRIZA-Progressive Alliance leader Alexis Tsipras on Tuesday, according to a press statement.

If the overall process proves unsuccessful, a caretaker government will lead Greece to new elections.

In the runoff elections, a revised electoral system will be used. This provides a bonus of up to 50 extra seats for the winning party, facilitating the formation of a single-party government.

The frontrunner could gain an absolute majority in parliament with about 38 percent of the votes under this system, according to political analysts.

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