Thursday 10 May 2012

Europe's worst nightmare


Say hello to Alexis Tsipras, president of the Greek Synaspismos political party and head of Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA) parliamentary group.

Who are Syriza? Here is a list of the parties that belong to the group along with a quick summary of their political positions. The list comes from Wikipedia (so it must be true):

Active Citizens (Ενεργοί Πολίτες): Democratic Socialism, Patriotism
Anticapitalist Political Group (ΑΠΟ): Communism, Trotskyism
Communist Organization of Greece (KOE): Maoism, Communism
Democratic Social Movement (DIKKI): Nationalist socialism, Euroscepticism
Ecosocialists of Greece: Eco-socialism, Left Ecology
Internationalist Workers' Left (DEA): Revolutionary socialism, Communism, Trotskyism
Movement for the United in Action Left (KEDA): Communism
Radical Left Group Roza
Radicals (Ριζοσπάστες): Democratic Socialism, Patriotism
Red (Κόκκινο): Communism, Trotskyism
Renewing Communist Ecological Left (AKOA): Democratic socialism, Eurocommunism, Green
Synaspismos (SYN): Democratic socialism, Eco-socialism, Eurocommunism, Ecologism, Feminism
Unitary Movement: Democratic socialism, Social democracy

Yesterday, the Greek President asked Tsipras to form a government. That alone should tell you something about the nature of the political crisis now facing Greece.

I imagine that asking Tsipras to form a government would be something similar to asking George Galloway to Buckingham palance and giving him the keys to Number 10.

What would it be like, I wonder, to live under a Respect administration headed by Gorgeous George and his mates? I never had to think about it before. It was just too absurd. Now, that terrible vista can no longer be ruled out. If spineless Euro-capitulationists brought Greece to utter ruin, their cousins in Britain can do the same.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Galloway as PM. The horror....

dearieme said...

It would be enough to drive you to drink. Which would be banned under his new laws.

Anonymous said...

Kosovo ?

droog said...

I think the people and things with normal, safe-sounding names are pretty scary as it is right now.

Whenever I hear the term "central banker" I brace myself for what will follow. Same with "confidence in banks", "supply-side economics", "mortgage", "neo-liberal", "Merkozy", etc. The list is endless. When I hear the word "securitisation" I get a mental image of Earth breaking away from its present orbit and taking a stroll through the asteroid belt. Who knew the 2012 Mayan apocalypse would be brought on by debt and bailouts?

After Blairites and Thatcherites I'm supposed to fret about Maoists? Bring it. I could do with a fresh hell to keep things lively.

(This post is only half in jest)

A democrat said...

The electorate, like a jury, are never wrong. Are the Greeks to get Irish style ballots foisted upon them? Keep on voting 'til you get the answer the EU wants?

They have to choose their own path, right or wrong, regardless of what anyone else thinks.

ernie said...

Droog is quite right - it's the Central Bankers who are fully responsible (together with the euro fanatics) for the emergence of extremism.Until sanity is returned to the running of economic policy this will get worse

Weekend Yachtsman said...

Disaster for Greece (but they brought it on themselves), nightmare for "Europe" (read "the EU"), last remaining hope for us.

I'm waiting with bated breath for the whole ghastly thing to collapse in ruins.

The Champagne's on ice.

jm said...

Let's see...

Leave the Euro, hotels charge 1000 drachma a week for a room at an exchange rate of 10 drachma to the Euro, 60 million Germans descend on Greece for 4 weeks...

Problem solved?

jm said...

Bugger, forgot he income from sale of sunbeds and towels...

Greece then buys out Spain.

It doesn't add up... said...

It's interesting that the Chinese have just UPGRADED Greece's credit rating:

http://www.dagongcredit.com/dagongweb/english/pr/show.php?id=204&table=web_e_zxzx

Do they have a cunning little plan?

dearieme said...

I found this on the Motley Fool website and thought it worth wider circulation:

"I administer a closed defined benefit scheme. ...I have one member reaching NRD this year and calculated his benefits today.

He was a member from 31/12/84 - 30/06/86....[and] has a deferred pension ... He paid in a grand total of £163 during his membership ... so say a net actual cost of £120.

His pension payable from NRD including revaluation is a wopping £1,089 pa.

Assuming he lives to 80 that will be some £16,000 gross, so £12,800 net. Annuity capital value approx [£25000]. All for £120!!!

Stevie b. said...

OK Alice - you're allowed a holiday, but 12 days....?