Dec. 14, 2014 2:36 p.m. ET
Greece Revisits the Panic
Antonis Samaras wants to scare voters rather than try to persuade them.
Stock markets took a tumble last week as the announcement of a snap presidential
election in Athens triggered fears about how lasting Greece’s reform-and-recovery
drive will be.
This panic about democracy is instructive.
The vote for the ceremonial role of president, which willlikely take three rounds of
balloting in the parliament over the next few weeks, has become a test of confidence
in Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.
He will be forced to call a snap parliamentary
election next month if he can’t secure 180 votes in the 300-member body for his
preferred candidate by the third round. He needs support from 25 independent
members to hit that threshold, and he’s not certain to get it. If he fails, voters will
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http://www.wsj.com/articles/greece-revisits-the-panic-1418585804
REVIEW & OUTLOOK
Greece Revisits the Panic
Antonis Samaras wants to scare voters rather than try to persuade them.
Mr. Samaras’s decision to call the presidential election that threatens his
government appears to be a gambit to neutralize the increasingly popular far-left
Syriza party, which promises to undo painful reforms and force creditors to take
bigger haircuts on Greek debt.With negotiations for Greece’s exit from its bailout
looming,Mr. Samaras seems to hope voters will return his unpopular government
to power rather than risk further chaos by handing Syriza power for the exit talks.
That strategy is symptomatic of the broader politicalfailures that have brought
Greece to this pass. Since 2010, Athens has reduced pensions, health-care spending
and government employment, and as a result borrowing costs have fallen and the
economy was showing signs of growing again. But hardly any Greek politician,
including the Prime Minister, has bothered to try to persuade voters of the merits of
undertaking painful reforms today in exchange for faster, sustainable growth
tomorrow.
On the contrary,Mr. Samaras has tried to scale back some reforms, ostensibly to
show his independence from the troika of the European Commission, European
Central Bank and InternationalMonetary Fund that have orchestrated the bailout.
In some cases this has been just as well, as with plans for tax cuts to roll back some of
the IMF’s ill-advised hikes.
But he has also dragged his feet on many other
measures, such as further reducing the bloated government headcount, waiting for
the troika to force his hand and then blaming the foreigners when the measures are
unpopular.
This “the-bailout-made-me” approach hasn’t built anything resembling a political
consensus behind reform,let alone a broader understanding among voters that
Greece’s crisis was largely Greece’s fault.
No wonder Syriza has enjoyed such
success arguing reforms were entirely unnecessary.Mr. Samaras himself was
against the bailout and its attendant reforms when it began in 2010 before he was
for it after he won election in 2012.
Now his strategy is to scare voters rather than
persuade them.
Mr. Samaras’s candidate may still win the presidential election, but investors will
remember it as a close-run thing. Before anyone bemoans the fickleness of Greek
voters,look at this episode instead as a warning of what happens when the political
class attempts to foist policies on voters without troubling to do the legwork of
persuasion. It would help if, rather than fearing democracy, European leaders got
better at it.
WSJ.com
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