Greece to hold European debt deal referendum
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- UndercoverElephant
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- adam2
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Yes, I suspect that they hoped to take the money and then vote on whether to give it back or not.UndercoverElephant wrote:Greece refused bailout money until after referendum.
Shit is hitting the fan.
It now looks as though they wont receive the latest bailout money.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
- UndercoverElephant
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I think Paul Mason got it bang on the money on last night's Newsnight. He said that this marks a new phase in the crisis - the one where there is a shift from trying to avoid a disaster to everybody covering their own backsides, trying to blame other people and protect their own interests on the assumption that the disaster is now unavoidable. This really is the endgame for the eurozone.
We must deal with reality or it will deal with us.
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- UndercoverElephant
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There's major shit going on now...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-15568915
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-15568915
Four of his ministers are threatening to vote against him on the referendum bill, and he only has a parliamentary majority of 1. That means it looks like the Greek government might collapse because it cannot agree with itself on whether or not to hold the referendum. That in turn leads to elections. I can't see how this process can be rescued now. It's all falling to pieces rather quickly.Greek referendum: Papandreou losing MPs' support
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou appears to heading for defeat in a vote of confidence after mounting opposition within his own party to a surprise referendum call on the EU bailout plan.
Mr Papandreou's Pasok party holds a slim majority, 152 out of 300 seats.
The Greek cabinet is now meeting in emergency session.
The row threatened to overshadow a meeting of the G20 in Cannes, where leading industrialised nations are to discuss the eurozone debt crisis.
Several government ministers have criticised the idea of a referendum.
We must deal with reality or it will deal with us.
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Edit for clarityUndercoverElephant wrote:There's major shit going on now...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-15568915
Four of his ministers are threatening to vote against him on the referendum bill, and he only has a parliamentary majority of 1. That means it looks like the Greek government might collapse because it cannot agree with itself on whether or not to hold the referendum. That in turn leads to elections. I can't see how this process can be rescued now. It's all falling to pieces rather quickly.Greek referendum: Papandreou losing MPs' support
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou appears to heading for defeat in a vote of confidence after mounting opposition within his own party to a surprise referendum call on the EU bailout plan.
Mr Papandreou's Pasok party holds a slim majority, 152 out of 300 seats.
The Greek cabinet is now meeting in emergency session.
The row threatened to overshadow a meeting of the G20 in Cannes, where leading industrialised nations are to discuss the eurozone debt crisis.
Several government ministers have criticised the idea of a referendum.
Following a vote of no confidence I take it that Papandreou would still lead the party? If not, would his Pasok party still seek a mandate from the people for a referendum? Would any other parties wish to take the referendum route?
Elections would be taking place as the country implodes due to the next bailout money being withheld. Yes, it's is major shit. I can't believe the S. market isn't lower.
Last edited by alternative-energy on 03 Nov 2011, 11:27, edited 2 times in total.
- UndercoverElephant
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God only knows. This particular part of this saga is moving so fast and unpredictably that almost anything could happen.alternative-energy wrote:So would one of the parties, Pasok perhaps, seek a mandate for a referendum or would no parties wish to take this route?UndercoverElephant wrote:There's major shit going on now...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-15568915
Four of his ministers are threatening to vote against him on the referendum bill, and he only has a parliamentary majority of 1. That means it looks like the Greek government might collapse because it cannot agree with itself on whether or not to hold the referendum. That in turn leads to elections. I can't see how this process can be rescued now. It's all falling to pieces rather quickly.Greek referendum: Papandreou losing MPs' support
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou appears to heading for defeat in a vote of confidence after mounting opposition within his own party to a surprise referendum call on the EU bailout plan.
Mr Papandreou's Pasok party holds a slim majority, 152 out of 300 seats.
The Greek cabinet is now meeting in emergency session.
The row threatened to overshadow a meeting of the G20 in Cannes, where leading industrialised nations are to discuss the eurozone debt crisis.
Several government ministers have criticised the idea of a referendum.
His own party (Pasok) is clearly not fully behind him on this, so who can say whether they'd seek a mandate for a referendum at any emergency elections. There's too many conflicts of interests here....what are the priorities of the Greek MPs going to be? Their own political future? The future of Greece? The future of the EU? And even if they can decide which of these priorities to put first it is not clear whether they should support the idea of a referendum or not, or even which way they should vote at that referendum....is it really in Greece's long term interest to accept even more austerity and stay in the Euro? Cos I don't think it is...
All I can see in my crystal ball is a descent into chaos: the "disorderly default" which triggers the Credit Default Swap Weapons of Financial Mass Destruction to go off. I think it is very likely that if there are going to be elections shortly in Greece that the Greek people are likely to elect an even more fractured Parliament than the one that currently exists, because far more people will vote for fringe parties which aren't seen as being responsible for presiding over this unholy mess.
We must deal with reality or it will deal with us.
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Yes, a hung parliament looks certain. It would appear clear, as was the case with the last bailout package, that everything possible will be done to ensure that a CDS event is not triggered. Is that because the size of the CDS market on Greek debt is massive and the banks never had the cash to honour them or because the contagion risk to other countries?All I can see in my crystal ball is a descent into chaos: the "disorderly default" which triggers the Credit Default Swap Weapons of Financial Mass Destruction to go off. I think it is very likely that if there are going to be elections shortly in Greece that the Greek people are likely to elect an even more fractured Parliament than the one that currently exists, because far more people will vote for fringe parties which aren't seen as being responsible for presiding over this unholy mess.
(Probably a bit of both)
Last edited by alternative-energy on 03 Nov 2011, 12:00, edited 1 time in total.
This is a problem that will be played out throughout the world.UndercoverElephant wrote: There's too many conflicts of interests here....what are the priorities of the Greek MPs going to be? Their own political future? The future of Greece? The future of the EU?
Q: Who would want to lead a country in the current situation?
A: Opportunists, psychopaths, and idealists with no grip on reality.
Not a great choice, but the alternative is anarchy, which isn't great either. Though IMO total anarchy could never last long: we'd probably see the emergence of local warlords quite quickly.
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BBC News wrote:Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou is expected to offer his resignation within the next half-hour, sources in Athens have told the BBC.
Mr Papandreou will meet Greek President Karolos Papoulios immediately after an emergency cabinet meeting has finished.
He is expected to offer a coalition government, with former Greek central banker Lucas Papademos at the helm.
Mr Papandreou himself would stand down, the BBC understands.
- UndercoverElephant
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It's the contagion that is the real killer, I think. The moment a disorderly Greek default occurs, Italian and Spanish debt becomes uninsurable.alternative-energy wrote:Yes, a hung parliament looks certain. It would appear clear, as was the case with the last bailout package, that everything possible will be done to ensure that a CDS event is not triggered. Is that because the size of the CDS market on Greek debt is massive and the banks never had the cash to honour them or because the contagion risk to other countries?All I can see in my crystal ball is a descent into chaos: the "disorderly default" which triggers the Credit Default Swap Weapons of Financial Mass Destruction to go off. I think it is very likely that if there are going to be elections shortly in Greece that the Greek people are likely to elect an even more fractured Parliament than the one that currently exists, because far more people will vote for fringe parties which aren't seen as being responsible for presiding over this unholy mess.
(Probably a bit of both)
We must deal with reality or it will deal with us.
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- biffvernon
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