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Syriza leading opinion polls ahead of new Greek elections despite rebellion and Alexis Tsipras stepping down

Newspaper poll gives leftist party a slim 3.5 point lead over the conservative party New Democracy

Samuel Osborne
Saturday 29 August 2015 11:32 BST
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Alexis Tsipras stepped down as Prime Minister, saying he had a 'political and ethical responsibility' to allow the electorate to judge his administration's work after it failed to live up to Syriza's promise to end austerity
Alexis Tsipras stepped down as Prime Minister, saying he had a 'political and ethical responsibility' to allow the electorate to judge his administration's work after it failed to live up to Syriza's promise to end austerity

The leftist Greek party Syriza has come out ahead in an opinion poll, despite defections following arguments over the country’s debt crisis and just one week after the party's chief and country's Prime Minister stepped down.

The party is seeking re-election following the resignation of Alexis Tsipras on the 21st of August.

Tsipras stepped down as Prime Minister, saying he had a "political and ethical responsibility" to allow the electorate to judge his administration’s work after it failed to live up to Syriza’s promise to end austerity.

Rather than renegotiate the harsh economic measures imposed by Greece’s international creditors, Tsipras ended up agreeing to the privatisation of much of the public sector and other reforms in exchange for a third massive bailout loan of €86bn (£62bn).

A poll in the leftist newspaper Efimerida ton Syntakton gave Syriza a slim 3.5 point lead over the conservative party New Democracy.

The survey, conducted by ProRata, said 23 per cent of voters would support Syriza, while 19.5 per cent would vote for New Democracy.

A previous ProRata poll in July showed a wider gap in Syriza’s favour, putting the party at 26 per cent compared to 15 per cent for New Democracy.

Popular Unity, the party of ex-Syriza dissidents, were supported by 3.5 per cent of voters. A party must win at least 3 per cent of the vote to enter the Greek Parliament.

Just over a quarter of those polled said they were undecided, making them the largest bloc.

Tsipras said he needed a stronger mandate to implement tough austerity measures.

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