ATHENS, (Reuters) – Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou faces a knife-edge confidence vote today after his plan for a referendum on a bailout — supposed to save both Greece and the euro zone from disaster — backfired disastrously.
But even if his socialist government survives the parliamentary vote, Papandreou’s days as Greek leader looked numbered after a deal with his cabinet under which, government sources said, he agreed to stand down after negotiating a coalition with the conservative opposition.
Much of Greece and many European leaders reacted with horror after Papandreou abruptly announced on Monday that he would put the 130-billion-euro ($180-billion) rescue plan, agreed at a euro zone summit only last week, to the Greek people.
Papandreou came out fighting, rejecting opposition demands, in public at least, that he make way for a caretaker administration with just two tasks: forcing the bailout through parliament without a referendum and calling of snap elections.
However, analysts said Papandreou may not be around much longer to fight such battles.
“The prime minister’s position is very difficult, since he chose not to respond to the opposition’s proposal for a transitional coalition government. Therefore I believe that it is unlikely that he will win the vote,” said head of ALCO pollsters, Costas Panagopoulos.
Through waves of austerity policies demanded by the nation’s international lenders, Papandreou has carried the parliamentary group of his PASOK party with him, despite much grumbling within the ranks.
But a steady trickle of defections has reduced his majority to the point that one or two waverers could inflict a defeat in the confidence vote, expected as late as midnight (2200 GMT).
PASOK has 152 deputies in the 300-member parliament. But lawmaker Eva Kaili said that while she would stay in the party, she would refuse to support the government in the confidence vote, meaning Papandreou could count at most on the support of 151 deputies.
Only one more defection would strip the government of its majority and probably trigger early elections.
TOOTH AND NAIL
Greeks have fought tooth and nail against policies which have brought spending cuts, tax rises and job losses, pushing the nation into three years of recession, and they have staged a series of strikes and protests, some of which turned violent.
This made a “no” vote in any referendum highly likely, even though this would cut off Greece’s last international financial lifeline and risked spreading its debt crisis to much bigger euro zone economies, such as Italy and Spain.
But after a tumultuous day in Greek politics, the chances of the referendum being held dwindled to almost nothing on Thursday. Papandreou offered to drop the idea anyway if the conservative opposition backed the bailout in parliament.
Over the day, he talked about negotiating with the conservative New Democracy party, saying the national interest ranked well above his personal ambitions. “I’m not tied to my post. I’m not interested either in being re-elected, I’m only interested in saving the country,” he told parliament.
Papandreou also called on his PASOK party to rally behind him in the confidence vote. But his public bravado appeared to mask an acceptance that his term may come to an end soon.
Government sources said Papandreou had struck a deal at a cabinet meeting yesterday under which he would stand down after he had negotiated a coalition agreement with the conservative opposition — provided he survives today’s vote.