
Cut off joint government
End of possible joint government scenarios with ND. – said yesterday the president of Hellenic Solution Kyriakos Velopoulos, speaking in parliament. “You didn’t get along and now you are trying, in an inelegant and insulting way to our own minds, to draw us into a spiral that we don’t want to enter. We don’t care about the co-government,” he said, concluding that the goal of his party was not a co-government, but… a government “by order of the Greek people.”
There is no decision
The landscape, however, is how it is shaped with looming political dead ends if N.D. does not gain confidence, inevitably leads to a public debate about changing the electoral law, which has dominated since last Monday. However, contrary to the prevailing climate, the prime minister is now weighing all the facts. Obviously, there are thoughts, and there is discussion, but those who think that decisions have been made are mistaken. However, the main “controversy” is that after Nikos Androulakis’ refusal to co-manage, the risk of non-management is more real than ever.
SYRIZA wants this?
A good source, certainly close to SYRIZA, told me that no matter what the official opposition says or will say publicly, if there is a change in the electoral law, in private they do not view this possibility negatively. The reason is that Kumunduru believes that changing the electoral law will strengthen bipolarity, and hence SYRIZA. It is no coincidence that Kostas Skandalidis of PASOK was the one who raged the most in parliament yesterday against the change in the electoral law.
ally of Erdogan
The President of Turkey is unwittingly participating in the debates that have unfolded in recent days on changing the electoral law. The ongoing attacks and threats from Recep Tayyip Erdogan against Kyriakos Mitsotakis give the government reason to talk even more about the need to ensure stability in the country from internal and external threats.
Recommendations
Many are telling Nikos Androulakis that the next time someone deviates from the center line, like Muslim MP Burhan Baran, they should be expelled. The most basic logic that suggestions are based on is that the leader always gets stronger when he removes someone.
Source: Kathimerini

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