May 8, 2024

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As if there were no elections

As if there were no elections

On the one hand, Syriza executives stay in state of shock On the other hand, after the election result, their dissenting rhetoric sounded like there were no elections. What they supported before the elections, they also support after the elections. A person who is usually in shock should not speak up – individually or in groups. He would have to wait for his mind to clear in order for him to be fully aware of where he was.

How they will solve internal party problems in Syriza is entirely their own business, but when I read that the main problem for some is “if they are going to go headless to Thessaloniki”, then I realized that this space is over. And that’s good for the place.

The sine qua non for the final and irreversible return to so-called normalcy is the emergence of PASOK as the official opposition party. And the atomization picture provided by SYRIZA helps with that.

But, let’s talk about it too Government who plays without an opponent. I am sure that both the Prime Minister and the top executives of the New Democracy realized they had a unique opportunity to compete with them Accelerate the pace of major reforms. They have nothing to fear, as long as they consistently apply their pre-election ads. Her opponents either surrendered or were completely harmless.

The left is an ideological corpse. Of course, “resurrection of the dead” is observed in politics – and there are plenty of examples – but this is mainly due to the tragic mistakes of opponents who did not understand the meaning of ideological and political hegemony.

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Today the government has no reason to respond with fear to the cries of the left. He has no reason to be drawn into facts, for he is in an absolutely privileged position to create them. Thus, I cannot fail to point out the satisfaction with which the entire reform space has accepted the Prime Minister’s declaration regarding the establishment of non-state universities, by legally circumventing Article 16 of the Constitution.

It seems that this advantageous situation for the government has an expiration date. In the near or distant future, the main opposition pole will be formed. But until then, playing alone on the field, she will have to make all the big changes that will change the lives of the citizens. They will make their daily lives better.

There is no need for lofty goals and pompous advertisements. The citizen wants one thing: to have a good time, with a government that is interested in solving his problems and is trying to do so. Having a government at his side inspires confidence and gives perspective. Before the ballot box, the voter soliloquizes “We’re doing so well, why would I risk it?”

This is how I see Kyriakos moving towards a third four-year term. He just has to follow and point it out in every direction.