Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras submitted his resignation and that of his cabinet to President Prokopis Pavlopoulos on Thursday, and asked that elections be held on the soonest possible date.
“The present parliament cannot offer a government of majority or a national unity government,” Tsipras told Pavlopoulos during a meeting on Thursday night.
Tsipras effectively lost his majority in the 300-seat Greek parliament after members of his leftist Syriza party broke ranks over a multi-billion euro bailout his government clinched with international lenders this month.
Tsipras's decision to return to the ballot box after seven bruising months in power deepens political uncertainty on the very day Greece began receiving funds under its third bailout programme with foreign creditors.
But a snap election should allow Tsipras to capitalise on his popularity with Greek voters before the toughest parts of the program begin to bite, and may allow him to return to power in a stronger position without anti-bailout rebels in his radical left Syriza party to slow him down.
Greek two-year bond yields jumped 78 basis points to 12.15 per cent, while Greek stocks closed down 3.5 per cent.
“The aim is to hold elections on September 20,” a government source said after Tsipras held talks with his advisers. The leftist leader is expected to make a televised address at 8 pm local (1700 GMT).
Tsipras had long been expected to seek early elections in the autumn to consolidate his position after caving into the creditors' demands for more austerity and economic reform in return for euro 86 billion ($96 billion) in bailout loans.
But he was forced to move quickly after nearly a third of Syriza lawmakers refused to back the program in parliament last week, robbing him of a guaranteed political majority.
Hugely popular among his supporters for trying to stand up to euro zone and IMF creditors and with the opposition in disarray, Tsipras is widely expected to return to power.
A Metron Analysis poll on July 24 put support for Syriza at 33.6 per cent, making it by far the most popular party, but not enough to govern without a coalition partner.
No polls have been published since then due to the holiday season.
Since being elected in January as the head of the first radical leftist government in modern Greek history, Tsipras fought a bitter battle with the creditors who have ploughed aid into Greece on condition of budget cuts and tax increases.
The prolonged standoff forced Athens to shut its banks for three weeks and impose capital controls before Tsipras accepted the bailout under threat of a financial collapse and Greek exit from the euro currency.
With the bailout finally approved in parliament and the first instalment of aid disbursed — allowing Greece to repay a debt to the European Central Bank that fell due on Thursday — Tsipras is turning his focus to internal politics.
Clear political landscape
Pressure for early elections had been steadily building in recent days.
Senior aides, such as Energy Minister Panos Skourletis, said the split with the party rebels who are threatening to break away had to be dealt with. “The political landscape must clear up. We need to know whether the government has or does not have a majority,” he told ERT.
Syriza is expected to call a party congress in September to resolve differences with the rebels. But Skourletis said Tsipras should move faster. “I would say elections first, then the party congress,” he said.
Calling elections in September means the vote will be held before voters start feeling the new bailout measures including further pension cuts, more value-added tax increases and a “solidarity” tax on incomes.
Knock-on effects of capital controls imposed in June, which are likely to stay until Greek banks are recapitalized later this year with bailout funds, will also hurt voters.
The other option had been to delay the vote till October, after international creditors have reviewed Greece's performance in keeping to the bailout program. They will then start to consider some way of easing the country's huge debt burden.
Tsipras has long argued that Greece will never be able to repay all its debts and wants some to be written off. While the euro zone favours merely delaying interest and principal repayments, Tsipras could still present any debt relief moves as an achievement to the electorate.
Syriza members have argued that the party should aim for a majority, saying this would achieve the stable government which Greece has lacked through the past five years of crisis.
“These elections, whenever they are announced by the government, will provide a stable governing solution. My feeling is that Syriza will have an absolute majority,” Dimitris Papadimoulis, a Syriza lawmaker in the European parliament, told Mega TV.
“The present parliament cannot offer a government of majority or a national unity government,” Tsipras told Pavlopoulos during a meeting on Thursday night.
Tsipras effectively lost his majority in the 300-seat Greek parliament after members of his leftist Syriza party broke ranks over a multi-billion euro bailout his government clinched with international lenders this month.
Tsipras's decision to return to the ballot box after seven bruising months in power deepens political uncertainty on the very day Greece began receiving funds under its third bailout programme with foreign creditors.
But a snap election should allow Tsipras to capitalise on his popularity with Greek voters before the toughest parts of the program begin to bite, and may allow him to return to power in a stronger position without anti-bailout rebels in his radical left Syriza party to slow him down.
Greek two-year bond yields jumped 78 basis points to 12.15 per cent, while Greek stocks closed down 3.5 per cent.
“The aim is to hold elections on September 20,” a government source said after Tsipras held talks with his advisers. The leftist leader is expected to make a televised address at 8 pm local (1700 GMT).
Tsipras had long been expected to seek early elections in the autumn to consolidate his position after caving into the creditors' demands for more austerity and economic reform in return for euro 86 billion ($96 billion) in bailout loans.
But he was forced to move quickly after nearly a third of Syriza lawmakers refused to back the program in parliament last week, robbing him of a guaranteed political majority.
ALSO READ: Greece makes debt repayment, minister calls for snap polls
Greece's complex constitution has special stipulations for holding elections less than 12 months after the previous vote, meaning the president must first consult other major parties to see if they can form a government — a highly unlikely option.Hugely popular among his supporters for trying to stand up to euro zone and IMF creditors and with the opposition in disarray, Tsipras is widely expected to return to power.
A Metron Analysis poll on July 24 put support for Syriza at 33.6 per cent, making it by far the most popular party, but not enough to govern without a coalition partner.
No polls have been published since then due to the holiday season.
Since being elected in January as the head of the first radical leftist government in modern Greek history, Tsipras fought a bitter battle with the creditors who have ploughed aid into Greece on condition of budget cuts and tax increases.
The prolonged standoff forced Athens to shut its banks for three weeks and impose capital controls before Tsipras accepted the bailout under threat of a financial collapse and Greek exit from the euro currency.
With the bailout finally approved in parliament and the first instalment of aid disbursed — allowing Greece to repay a debt to the European Central Bank that fell due on Thursday — Tsipras is turning his focus to internal politics.
Clear political landscape
Pressure for early elections had been steadily building in recent days.
Senior aides, such as Energy Minister Panos Skourletis, said the split with the party rebels who are threatening to break away had to be dealt with. “The political landscape must clear up. We need to know whether the government has or does not have a majority,” he told ERT.
Syriza is expected to call a party congress in September to resolve differences with the rebels. But Skourletis said Tsipras should move faster. “I would say elections first, then the party congress,” he said.
Calling elections in September means the vote will be held before voters start feeling the new bailout measures including further pension cuts, more value-added tax increases and a “solidarity” tax on incomes.
Knock-on effects of capital controls imposed in June, which are likely to stay until Greek banks are recapitalized later this year with bailout funds, will also hurt voters.
The other option had been to delay the vote till October, after international creditors have reviewed Greece's performance in keeping to the bailout program. They will then start to consider some way of easing the country's huge debt burden.
Tsipras has long argued that Greece will never be able to repay all its debts and wants some to be written off. While the euro zone favours merely delaying interest and principal repayments, Tsipras could still present any debt relief moves as an achievement to the electorate.
Syriza members have argued that the party should aim for a majority, saying this would achieve the stable government which Greece has lacked through the past five years of crisis.
“These elections, whenever they are announced by the government, will provide a stable governing solution. My feeling is that Syriza will have an absolute majority,” Dimitris Papadimoulis, a Syriza lawmaker in the European parliament, told Mega TV.