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Dissent-ridden
Greek Socialist party PASOK is on a downward spiral and conservative
New Democracy is maintaining its popularity while the Democratic Left
has attracted the support of a large segment of austerity-weary Greeks,
according to the results of a new opinion poll that also show that nine
in 10 Greeks are unhappy with Prime Minister Lucas Papademos's coalition
government.
The new poll, carried out by Public Issue for daily
Kathimerini, showed ND to have inched forward to 31%, consolidating its
growing popularity, while PASOK continues to languish in fifth place
with 8%. The poll, carried out on a sample of 1,002 people last week,
showed the Communist Party (KKE) and the Coalition of the Radical Left
(SYRIZA) to be holding firm at 12.5% and 12% respectively. But the
Democratic Left has surged in popularity, garnering 18% of the public
vote (up 4.5% since last month).
All together, the leftist parties garner an
impressive 42.5%, but as KKE has ruled out cooperating with other
parties, the figure is misleading. Support for the right-wing Popular
Orthodox Rally (LAOS), the third party in the tripartite coalition,
slipped to 5% -- from 8% during its heyday in 2010 -- while the
extreme-right Chrysi Avgi (Golden Dawn) has surged to 3%, hitting the
threshold for entering Parliament. The poll's results for parties are
broadly reflected in the support for the politicians that lead them.
Democratic Left leader Fotis Kouvelis tops the list, attracting the
support of 56% of respondents, followed by 41% for SYRIZA's Alexis
Tsipras and ND chief Antonis Samaras with 31%. Respondents were divided
on Papademos, with 48% expressing a negative opinion and 46% a positive
one. Respondents were virtually unanimous though in their criticism of
his government's achievements, with 91% expressing disappointment.
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