Greek MPs fail again to elect president
December 23, 2014The Greek parliament on Tuesday failed to elect government candidate Stavros Dimas as the country's new president in a second vote, raising the chances of snap general elections.
Dimas, who was the EU environment commissioner from 2004 to 2010, scored just 168 votes, 32 short of the 200 votes required to win the post.
This now means that a third and final vote will be held on December 29. If Dimas fails to receive the necessary 180 votes in that round, it will automatically trigger early elections, the second in less than two years.
Unwelcome prospect
The prospect of snap elections is an unwelcome one, particularly to officials with European Union and International Monetary Fund. They fear a victory by radical leftist party Syriza, which wants to renegotiate Greece's international bailout and roll back the austerity measures of recent years.
Syriza, which despite its fiscal reform plans says it still wants to keep Greece in the euro, leads slightly in opinion polls.
The conservative government of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras needs opposition support to get Dimas elected, and Samaras on Sunday offered to hold early elections by the end of 2015 in a bid to get independent MPs on board.
The Greek stock exchange dipped by some 2 percent in the minutes following Tuesday's result.
tj/mg (AP, Reuters, AFP)