On eve of election, Greece eyes Mitsotakis win

ATHENS-Sipping her four-euro ($4.36) freddo in a suburban Athens cafe, Maria N. says she has no illusions about how Greece’s national election on Sunday is going to turn out. “I’m not even sure I’m going to vote, the outcome is foregone,” the doctor says. With opinion polls giving him a lead of around 20 percentage points, conservative leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis is almost assured of winning a second straight four-year term. But he fears that voter apathy could end up costing him the absolute majority he seeks, which was the whole point of him calling fresh elections for the second time in a month. Crediting him with bringing back stable economic growth to a country once notorious for its debt woes, voters gave Mitsotakis 40.79 percent of the vote on May 21.
But his party fell five seats short of a parliamentary majority, which would have required the 55-year-old to govern in a coalition, something that he has refused. Getting voters to return to the polls however is a gamble for the former Harvard graduate and McKinsey financial consultant. His key challenge is to keep the 9.8 million eligible Greek voters away from the beach this weekend.
He has even gone as far as to warn of a third election in August, at the height of the busy tourism season, if he fails to clinch enough votes to form his own government. “I hope we don’t have to meet again in early August,” he told Skai TV on the last day of campaigning. “This is no joke,” he added. On May 21, Mitsotakis crushed the leftist Syriza party of former prime minister Alexis Tsipras by over 20 points in a victory nobody expected to be as clear. A Pulse poll for Skai TV on Thursday suggested that 73 percent would vote for the same party they chose in May.
Tsipras is still remembered as the prime minister who nearly crashed Greece out of the euro. Having now lost four electoral contests to Mitsotakis, his future as head of Syriza is at stake.
                 

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