EU support for Spain fuels Greek hopes for a better deal
Two days after Spain was extended a 100-billion-euro bailout for its
banks, the leaders of Greece’s main political parties appeared to
interpret the development as a sign that Athens will be cut some slack
in renegotiating the terms of the country’s bailout with its
international creditors.
A spokesman for the leftist SYRIZA, which
has called for a rejection of the loan deal signed by the previous
government in February, claimed that the support extended to Spain was
proof that austerity in Europe has failed. “Developments in Spain fully
vindicate us in our reading of the crisis: This is a deep structural
crisis of the eurozone itself,” spokesman Panos Skourletis said, adding
that the developments in Europe open new perspectives for Greece and the
eurozone.
Conservative leader Antonis Samaras, whose party was
close to SYRIZA in the last opinion polls, suggested that Athens should
seek to negotiate with Europe rather than clashing with it -- a clear
dig at SYRIZA.
“Just think, at a time when a country like Spain negotiates, some argue that we have to clash with Europe,” Samaras said.
The
leader of socialist PASOK, Evangelos Venizelos, said the Spanish deal
showed European leaders were preparing for the possibility of a Greek
euro exit that could occur if the anti-bailout leftists come to power.
“They
are preparing a firewall to deal with whatever happens in Greece,” said
Venizelos, the former finance minister who negotiated the country’s
debt deal with creditors and saw his party’s popularity plummet as a
result.
Venizelos, who met with Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti
in Rome on Monday, said there was support for his proposal for revising
the terms of Greece’s debt deal “as long as Greece has a comprehensive
plan, social consensus, political unity and is willing and capable to
push through wide-ranging reforms.”
Monti, for his part, said it
was important that Greek politicians strive to form a government by June
28 ahead of the next scheduled EU leaders’ summit on June 28 and 29.
The Italian technocrat premier also expressed support for Venizelos’s
proposal for a broad unity government.
In a related development, a
report by Reuters published on Monday suggested that European finance
officials have discussed limiting the size of withdrawals from ATM
machines, imposing border checks and introducing eurozone capital
controls as a worst-case scenario should Athens decide to leave the
euro. |
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