ATHENS, (Reuters) – The Greek government faced possible collapse today as ruling party lawmakers demanded Prime Minister George Papandreou resign for throwing the nation’s euro membership into jeopardy with a shock call for a referendum.
Caught unawares by his high-risk gamble, the leaders of France and Germany summoned Papandreou to crisis talks in Cannes tomorrow to push for a quick implementation of Greece’s new bailout deal ahead of a summit of the G20 major world economies.
Six senior members of the ruling PASOK socialist party, angered by his decision to call a plebiscite on the 130 billion euro rescue package agreed only last week, said Papandreou should make way for “a politically legitimate” administration.
A leading PASOK lawmaker quit the party, narrowing Papandreou’s already slim parliamentary majority, and two others said Greece needed a government of national unity followed by snap elections, which the opposition also demanded.
Euro zone leaders thrashed out Greece’s second financial rescue since last year, in return for yet more austerity, in the hope that it would ease uncertainty surrounding the future of the 17-nation single currency.
Instead, financial markets suffered another bout of turmoil on Tuesday due to the new political uncertainty and the risk that long suffering Greeks may reject the bailout.
The euro fell nearly three cents against the dollar and the risk premium on Italian bonds over safe-haven German Bunds hit a euro lifetime high, raising Rome’s borrowing costs to levels that proved unsustainable for Ireland and Portugal.