Greece geared up for its fifth election in six years with a poll today showing leftist leader Alexis Tsipras in the lead for re-election despite a wave of defections from his Syriza party.
"Today the great electoral battle begins. The Greek people will give a strong mandate for the present and the future," Tsipras said in a statement to Avgi, the Syriza daily.
"Greece cannot turn back and will not turn back. It will only go forward," said Tsipras, who was elected on an anti-austerity ticket in January but now seeks re-election to apply fresh cuts.
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The survey by pollsters ProRata said 23% of voters would support Syriza over 19.5% for New Democracy.
But another 25.5% of respondents are undecided.
Greece's President Prokopis Pavlopoulos on Thursday appointed the country's top judge as caretaker PM to hold the vote, expected on September 20.
Supreme Court chair Vassiliki Thanou, 65, thus became Greece's first female prime minister albeit briefly.
The official announcement of the election date is expected later today after parliament is formally dissolved.
Tsipras' Syriza party has been hit by a wave of defections across the board after he signed up to a third EU bailout which critics say is the harshest Greece has adopted so far.
A group of 25 hardline lawmakers split off to form their own party, Popular Unity, and Syriza has also been hit with resignations at local party level.
According to today's opinion poll, Popular Unity would pick up 3.5% of the vote, just above the minimum percentage required for parliamentary representation.