Greece clears path to next bailout talks
ATHENS, Greece – Greece’s parliament overwhelmingly approved a new batch of reforms today demanded by the country’s international creditors, clearing the way for talks on a third multibillion dollar bailout without which the country faces total financial ruin.
Lawmakers voted 230-63 in favor of the measures, following a whirlwind debate that ended early in the morning. Another five members of the 300-seat house voted present, a kind of abstention.
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras suffered a revolt among his own radical left Syriza party lawmakers, but had no trouble passing the draft legislation with the backing of pro-European opposition parties.
The number of disaffected Syriza lawmakers, who see the reforms as a betrayal of the anti-austerity platform that brought their party to power in January, shrunk compared to last week’s similar vote.
The reforms were the final prerequisite before Greece can start negotiations with creditors on a third bailout worth about $93 billion.
Failure to have approved them would have derailed the bailout and rekindled fears over Greece’s future in the shared currency.
Addressing parliament before the vote, Tsipras said the reforms were a necessary price to pay to keep Greece alive after stormy talks with its creditors nearly collapsed earlier this month.
“We have chosen a compromise that forces us to implement a program in which we do not believe, and we will implement it because the alternatives are tough,” he told lawmakers. “We are summoned today to legislate under a state of emergency.”
Tsipras also ruled out resigning.
“The presence of the left in this government isn’t about the pursuit of office, it’s a bastion from which to fight for our people’s interests,” he said. “And as far as I’m concerned, I won’t abandon this bastion, at least of my own free will.”
Tsipras said approval would give Greece breathing room to quash speculation that the country will be forced to abandon the euro and help it regain market confidence and eventually tap bond markets again.
Before the debate got underway, about 10,000 people demonstrated outside parliament, protesting the latest measures to overhaul Greece’s judicial and banking sectors. Minor violence marred the end of the protest when a few teenagers threw petrol bombs at riot police, but no injuries or arrests were reported.
Negotiations with creditors are now expected to start soon.
The Syriza-led coalition government hopes the new bailout talks can conclude before Aug. 20, when Greece must repay a debt worth more than $3.3 billion to the European Central Bank.
On Wednesday, the ECB provided a new vital cash injection to Greece’s battered banks. A European banking official told the Associated Press the ECB decided to increase emergency liquidity to Greek banks by $980 million – the second such cash injection in just under a week.