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Opinion Polls Show 'No' Ahead in Greek Bailout Referendum

Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 5, 2015




First results show 'No' ahead in Greek referendum

France 24, 2015-07-05

Greek voters wearied by five years of crisis and belt-tightening head to the polls Sunday, with early results showing the 'No' camp backed by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras in the lead.

After a dramatic week that saw Greece default on its debts, close its banks and start rationing cash, Greeks voted on Sunday on whether to accept or reject tough conditions sought by international creditors to extend a lending lifeline that has kept the debt-stricken country afloat.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras urged fellow Greeks to vote “No” to the new austerity measures proposed by the country’s creditors, saying this would strengthen his hand at the negotiating table. But EU leaders warned Greek voters that a negative outcome could jeopardize the country’s place in the euro zone.


Opinion polls show 'No' ahead in Greek bailout referendum

By George Georgiopoulos and Michele Kambas

Sun Jul 5, 2015 1:14pm EDT

 Reuters --

Opinion polls released after Greece's bailout referendum on Sunday showed the 'No' vote ahead, suggesting voters had defied warnings from across Europe that rejection of the creditors' terms would set their country on a path out of the euro.

No exit polls were conducted, but three opinion polls by GPO, Metron Analysis and MRB all showed the 'No' camp' ahead by three points. A poll by Marc estimated 49.5 to 54.5 percent of Greeks voted 'No' compared to 45.5 to 50.5 percent voting 'Yes', based on surveys conducted through the week.

The polls were released after voting ended on Sunday because of a ban on the publication of polls on the day before a vote is held.

Nikos Filis, parliamentary spokesman for the ruling Syriza party said the result of the opinion polls would allow the government to move ahead quickly to reach a deal with creditors.

"I think this is guidance for the government," he said after the polls came out.

Athens' partners have warned over the past week that a 'No' vote would mean cutting bridges with Europe and driving Greece's crippled financial system into outright bankruptcy, dramatically worsening the country's 5-year-long depression.

If confirmed, the result will also deliver a hammer blow to the European Union's grand single currency project. Intended to be permanent and unbreakable when it was created 15 years ago, the euro zone could now be on the point of losing its first member with the risk of further unraveling to come.

Greek banks, which have been closed all week and rationing withdrawals from cash machines, are expected to run out of money within days unless the European Central Bank provides an emergency lifeline.

Opinion polls show 'No' ahead in Greek bailout referendum | Reuters. .

However central bankers warned before the vote that a 'No' would make it almost impossible for the ECB to turn on the taps, leaving the Greek financial system without funds and facing imminent collapse.

A 'No' vote would leave Greece and the euro zone in uncharted waters. Unable to borrow money on capital markets, Greece has one of the world's highest levels of public debt. The International Monetary Fund warned last week that it would need massive debt relief and 50 billion euros in fresh funds.

Greece's leftwing government called the referendum only a week ago after it rejected the tough terms offered by international creditors as the price for releasing billions of euros in bailout funds.

Opinion polls show 'No' ahead in Greek bailout referendum | Reuters. .

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras denounced the bailout terms as "blackmail" and declared that a 'No' vote would strengthen the government's hand to get a better deal that would allow the banks to re-open this week.

A succession of European leaders and policy makers warned, however, that the bailout terms were no longer on the table. They said the vote was now effectively about whether Greeks wanted to remain in the euro or return to the drachma.

Opinion polls show a large majority of Greeks want to remain in the euro. But, exhausted and resentful after years of austerity cuts imposed under successive bailout programs, many appear to have shrugged off the warnings of disaster, trusting that a deal can still be reached.

(Additional reporting by Noah Barkin and Madeline Chambers in Berlin, Isla Binnie in Rome, Lefteris Karagiannopoulos and Michele Kambas in Athens; Writing by Deepa Babington and Matt Robinson; Editing by Peter Graff)

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For a background about the Greek financial tragedy, read:

Greek Debt Crisis Caused by Military Spending, Deficits, and Goldman Sachs Corruption By Erik Fair and Beat Balzli.htm


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