Παρασκευή 27 Απριλίου 2012

Με τον Πάνο Καμμένο τα έβαλαν οι Times


Όταν συστημικα ΜΜΕ ανά τον πλανήτη ασχολούνται με τους "Ανεξαρτήτους Ελληνες"και τον πρόεδρο του κινήματος Πανο Καμμένο κατηγορώντας τον, αυτό και μονό αποτελεί παράσημο και καταδεικνύει τον ...πατριωτισμό και τον ρολό των "Ανεξάρτητων Ελλήνων" επιβραβεύοντας όλους εμάς που αποφασίσαμε να εμπιστευτούμε τον Πανο Καμμένο για τα αγνά και βαθιά πατριωτικά αισθήματα του.
Οι Βρετανοί ξαφνικά καίγονται για το...ευρώ και τον...
Καμμένο!
Οι Times περιγράφουν τον Πάνο Καμμένο και το κόμμα του ως μέρος του λαϊκιστικού κύματος στην Ελλάδα που εξεγείρεται.
Με τους «Αναξάρτητους Έλληνες» και ειδικά με τον πρόεδρο τους Πάνο Καμμένο τα έβαλαν οι Times οι οποίοι σε δημοσίευμα τους χαρακτηρίζουν το κόμμα του απειλή για την Ελλάδα και ολόκληρη την Ευρωζώνη.
Οι Times περιγράφουν τον Πάνο Καμμένο και το κόμμα του ως μέρος του λαϊκιστικού κύματος στην Ελλάδα που εξεγείρεται κατά της αυστηρής λιτότητας που επιβάλλεται από τις Βρυξέλλες και πιο ιδιαίτερα από τη Γερμανία.
O τίτλος του άρθρου μάλιστα είναι: «Ένας επαναστάτης πολιτικός που οδηγεί σε εκλογική εξέγερση εναντίον των μέτρων λιτότητας».
Η Βρετανική εφημερίδα επίσης σχολιάζει ότι σύμφωνα με τις δημοσκοπήσεις οι Έλληνες «θέλουν και την πίτα γεμάτη και το σκύλο χορτάτο».
«Η μεγάλη πλειοψηφία υποστηρίζει την παραμονή στο ευρώ, αλλά όμοιο ποσοστό των πολιτών αντιτίθεται στους όρους της διάσωσης. Κόμματα και της δεξιάς και της αριστεράς υποστηρίζουν ότι αυτό είναι δυνατό», προσθέτει το δημοσίευμα.
Το άρθρο καταλήγει ότι υπάρχει ελάχιστη πιθανότητα σχηματισμού κυβέρνησης συνασπισμού μεταξύ των αντιμνημονιακών κομμάτων, καθώς τα τρία κόμματα της αριστεράς δεν μπορούν να συμφωνήσουν μεταξύ τους, πόσο μάλλον να ενωθούν με τη δεξιά.

cretalive.gr

Anti-bailout party rocks Greek politics


BY: JAMES BONE, IN ATHENS
PANOS Kammenos was purged from one of Greece's ruling parties after he voted in parliament against the tough terms of the country's international bailout. Two months later, he leads a soaringly popular anti-bailout party that could threaten Greece's continued compliance with the EU and IMF austerity program and throw the eurozone into renewed turmoil after the country's election on May 6.


The name he has chosen for his new party is Independent Greeks.


"Greece is a very strange nation. If you tell the Greeks: 'We control you', the Greek will resist," Mr Kammenos said yesterday. "If you say, 'My friend, we have to work together', the Greek will work. If you say, 'You must work', he will stop everything.


"We have to work hard, but we want to work in freedom, with democratic institutions and sovereignty." Mr Kammenos, an economist who is also an amateur diver and helicopter pilot, is part of a populist wave in Greece that is revolting against the stringent austerity imposed by Brussels - and, more particularly, Germany.


The nation has been dominated for decades by the conservative New Democracy Party and the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (Pasok).


They formed a coalition last year under Lucas Papademos to implement the harsh bailout terms.


Polls show, however, that an anti-bailout "protest vote" on both the Left and Right could threaten the formation of another pro-bailout government in Greece after May 6.


The two leading parties, used to winning 80 per cent of the vote between them, are now struggling to muster enough support to get a parliamentary majority.


Their support has collapsed to a historic low of barely 45 per cent because of their backing for the bailout.


There is a proliferation of smaller parties and as many as 10, including the neo-Fascist Golden Dawn, are expected to break the 3 per cent threshold to get seats in parliament.


Elias Nikolakopoulos, a veteran pollster and professor at Athens University, said the situation was in flux.


"The opinion polls are very unstable. It's a very diffuse protest vote.


"You have an answer today in favour of the Independent Greeks and the same person two days later says Democratic Left," he said.


"The first thing is to protest. The second is to make a decision about which party is the best for protest."


Mr Kammenos's party, though only two months old, is challenging for third place behind the two main parties and has almost 10 per cent support in the polls.


Mr Kammenos spent 19 years as a New Democracy MP, serving as Greece's maritime affairs minister, before being expelled along with 20 others for his vote in February.


He has employed modern methods to build popular support. "This is the first time in Europe that we have an internet party. We started with one Facebook page with 1000 likes. Now we have 67,000," he said.


"We have 20,000 volunteers on the internet. I send them a video from my iPad. They take it to the cafe and connect to the television to show the older people, who don't have an internet connection."


Polls show Greeks want to have their cake and eat it. A large majority favours remaining in the euro, but similar numbers also oppose the bailout terms. Parties on both Right and Left argue that this is economically possible.


There is little chance that the anti-bailout parties will be able to form a coalition government of their own. The three left-wing parties cannot settle their own differences, let alone unite with the Right. If the "protest vote" means New Democracy and Pasok do not win enough seats to renew their pro-bailout coalition after the May 6 poll, possibly with the help of minor parties, Greece will be forced into a second election.

The Times                                                                                                                                            πηγη

Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:

Δημοσίευση σχολίου