Lawmakers are due to vote on a second batch of reforms tomorrow in a fresh test of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' authority, after he suffered a major rebellion in his radical-left party Syriza during a vote on a first tranche of bailout measures last week.
After parliament has voted on the second bill -- which must pass if Greece is to receive the bailout worth up to 86 billion euros (USD 93 billion) over three years -- the government "will immediately resume negotiations with the (lender) institutions, EU, ECB and IMF, which should take until August 20 at the latest," said government spokeswoman Olga Gerovassili.
Within Syriza, 32 of the party's 149 MPs voted against the measures, including former finance minister Yanis Varoufakis among them. A further six abstained.
The second bill includes an EU directive, adopted after the financial crisis in Cyprus in 2013, that guarantees bank deposits up to 100,000 euros (USD 108,000), as well as civil justice reforms designed to speed up legal proceedings and reduce their costs.
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Athens agreed last week to carry out tough reforms in exchange for a massive third bailout aimed at keeping Greece from crashing out of the eurozone.
Asked if the threat of a Greek exit from the euro, or "Grexit", had passed, EU Economic Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici said, "I think we've made a big step in that direction."
Analysts forecast that Tsipras' coalition government, which teams his party with the nationalist Independent Greeks, will be forced to call early elections if the revolt within Syriza continues.
An opinion poll at the weekend published in the To Vima newspaper found 68 percent of respondents named Tsipras as the politician most capable of leading the country, far ahead of any of his rivals.