Fact is neither the international bourgeoisie nor the international left nor 
even the Syriza leadership itself can predict with any degree of certainty what 
it’s political direction will be. That will depend on circumstances, notably 
whether the EU governments and the IMF are prepared to cut the new government 
some slack, and how far the Greek masses are prepared to go in risking a 
rupture with the eurozone. The upcoming negotations on the rollover of Greek 
debt should provide early answers to both. Here is an example of the parallel 
rumination within the ruling class about Syriza. Its wishful thinking is the 
opposite of that on the left: in its case, that Tspiras and Syriza will be 
forced to emulate the “pragmatic” behaviour of the Papandreou-led PASOK 
government which similarly excited and then dashed the expectations of the 
masses who raised it to power.

Will Syriza’s Tsipras turn out to be a Lula or a Chávez?
By Tony Barber
Financial Times
January 25 2015

A leftwing party sweeps to victory in Greece, filling European allies with 
unease. Its leader says Greeks face a choice “between the past and the future, 
between progress and regression, between dependence and national independence”.

Is this the voice of Alexis Tsipras, leader of the radical Syriza party, which 
won Sunday’s election in Greece? It sounds like him. In fact, it is Andreas 
Papandreou, the late prime minister and leader of the Pasok socialist party.

His electoral triumph in October 1981 turned Greek politics upside down. It 
created uncertainty in European capitals about Greece’s reliability, just as 
Syriza’s triumph will.

Papandreou governed Greece throughout the 1980s. The way he wielded power and 
handled relations with Europe and the US offers insights into how Mr Tsipras, 
assuming he becomes prime minister, may behave in office. The differences 
between Greece’s circumstances then and now are, however, as important as the 
similarities.

Mr Tsipras is to rule a country whose public debt amounts to 175 per cent of 
economic output. In coming weeks and months, the stability of Greece’s 
government finances and banking system will depend greatly on the foreign 
creditors — the EU and International Monetary Fund — which have kept the nation 
afloat since 2010.

In 1981 Papandreou had more room for independent action than Mr Tsipras will 
have. Greek public debt 34 years ago was about 25 per cent of gross domestic 
product. This allowed Papandreou to indulge in a vast expansion of the public 
sector, colonising it with Pasok appointees to the point where the line 
dividing party from state became invisible.

Mr Tsipras promises a large increase in public expenditure. He will aim to 
place trusted Syriza loyalists in the state apparatus, a measure that would 
recall Papandreou’s installation of Pasok “Green Guards” in civil service jobs. 
But Greece’s finances are so straitened, with €4.3bn in debt repayments due by 
March, and billions more by August, that a Pasok-style spending spree is 
unthinkable.

Mr Tsipras will want to make good on his less costly election promises, 
restoring electricity to poor households cut off for not paying bills, and 
providing food stamps for destitute Greeks.

He could fund such steps by raising up to €2bn with the elimination of various 
tax and social security payment exemptions. He may also try to make scapegoats 
of one or two of the oligarchs who dominate Greek big business.

In seeking to renegotiate Greece’s €245bn EU-IMF bailout, and win debt relief 
by hook or by crook, Mr Tsipras resembles Papandreou, who threatened to 
withdraw from Nato and the then European Economic Community, which Greece had 
joined at the start of 1981.

In the end, Papandreou took neither step. His political tactics were 
confrontational, and his rhetoric glowed with fire, but in the essentials of 
his foreign policy he was pragmatic. Generous European agricultural subsidies, 
and in later years regional aid funds, tempered Pasok’s radicalism.

The central question, to which no definitive answer can yet be given, is 
whether Mr Tsipras will likewise turn out to be a moderate in power, willing to 
cut deals with Greece’s creditors. For three years he has sometimes sounded 
like Hugo Chávez, the late populist Venezuelan president and bugbear of the US, 
and sometimes like Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the former Brazilian president 
who, once in office, ruled as a reformist rather than a radical leftist.

Working in Mr Tsipras’s favour, if he chooses the road of pragmatism, is the 
fact that Greece in 2015 is not steeped in venomous ideological warfare as it 
was in 1981, only 32 years after the end of the 1946-49 civil war.

Working against him is the fact that Syriza’s far-left factions abhor 
pragmatism. The decisions he must take will be agonisingly awkward. Perhaps the 
safest prediction is that, unlike Papandreou, Mr Tsipras is unlikely to enjoy 
eight consecutive years in government.


On Jan 26, 2015, at 2:17 PM, Charlie <[email protected]> wrote:

> Syriza, not the KKE, is obviously the protagonist of the moment. I cited 
> Galbraith to suggest that the effects that its actions have on Greek 
> workers bear careful watch.
> 
> Jean-Christophe wrote:
>> 
> It is not about how many seats they have or how left they are as Charlie 
> seems to suggest.
> <
> 
> _______________________________________________
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