Greek government survives vote of no-confidence in run-up to the elections

Greek government survives vote of no-confidence in run-up to the elections

Greece’s government on Friday survived, as expected, a no-confidence vote following a motion by the country’s opposition leader over a wiretapping scandal that has stung the centre-right governing party in the run-up to elections.

Of parliament’s 300 members, 143 voted in favor of the no-confidence motion while 156 voted against. One lawmaker was absent. 


The vote followed a heated three-day parliamentary debate. The motion had been expected to fail, as the governing New Democracy party holds a comfortable majority of 156 seats.

Main opposition Syriza party leader Alexis Tsipras said Wednesday when he filed the motion that it would force Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to answer publicly about the scandal, in which a series of high-ranking politicians, government ministers and military officers were reportedly under surveillance.


Speaking during Friday's acrimonious debate, Tsipras accused Mitsotakis of personally ordering the wiretaps.


“You knew very well that the surveillance had occurred, and you knew very well that the surveillance had occurred because you had ordered it, Mr. Mitsotakis,” Tsipras said.


The wiretapping scandal broke in earnest in August, when a top government aide and the head of the country’s intelligence agency resigned following revelations that a Socialist politician - who was later elected as head of Greece’s third largest party - had been under telephone surveillance. 

Mitsotakis insisted at the time that the wiretapping was legal but improper, and that had he known about it he would not have approved it.


The government also later introduced legislation tightening regulations over the use of spyware in the country.


“The government and I have expressed ourselves clearly since the start,” Mitsotakis said in response to Tsipras’ speech, noting that he had assumed the political responsibility, had replaced people in ..

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