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Greek Prime Minister Scraps Referendum, Rejects Pressure To Resign

ELENA BECATOROS and DEMETRIS NELLAS   11/ 3/11 09:34 PM ET   AP

ATHENS, Greece — Greece was in turmoil and the world economy in limbo Thursday as a high-stakes game of political brinkmanship in Athens led Prime Minister George Papandreou to abandon his explosive plan to put a European rescue deal to a referendum.

The dramatic developments overshadowed the G20 summit of world leaders in the French resort of Cannes, where President Barack Obama implored European leaders to swiftly work out a eurozone plan to deal with the continent's crisis, which threatens to push the world back into recession.

Papandreou sparked a global crisis this week when he announced plans to put the latest European deal to cut Greece's massive debt – a hard-fought accord that took months of negotiations – to a popular vote. The idea horrified other EU nations, Greece's creditors and financial markets as investors worried over the prospect that Greece could be forced into a disorderly default.

Faced with mounting opposition at home and abroad, Papandreou withdrew the referendum call after the main opposition conservatives indicated they backed the debt deal. With them potentially on board, his finance minister argued, there was no longer a need to put the issue to the Greek people.

Stocks rose sharply in the United States and Europe on news the referendum plan had been scrapped, as well as a surprise move by the European Central Bank to cut interest rates. The Dow Jones industrial average jumped 208 points, or 1.8 percent, to close above 12,000 for only the third time since early August.

But Papandreou's government was still in danger. The prime minister faces a crucial confidence vote in Parliament at midnight Friday, after two days of acrimony that saw many of his own lawmakers and ministers rebel. Many asked for his resignation, furious that his insistence on a referendum had endangered the debt deal and led European leaders to question Greece's treasured participation in the euro, the common currency used by 17 EU nations.

The governing Socialists have a slim two-seat majority in the 300-member legislature, and at least one lawmaker has publicly threatened to vote against the Papandreou government.

In an address to Parliament, Papandreou stressed his only interest was Greece's well-being, and hinted he was willing to eventually step down.

"I don't care about being re-elected. I am interested in saving the country," he said, adding that he was open to the mounting calls for the creation of a transitional government that would secure the debt deal, and make sure Greece receives the next, vital installment of its existing bailout funds. After that, he said, he would be open to holding elections.

"Let everything be discussed – the makeup of the government and anything else. ... I am not glued to my seat," Papandreou said.

"My position is crystal clear: Let talks start immediately to create a formation that is broadly accepted, efficient and able to deal with the national interest in this difficult time for the country."

Once Greece is on an even course, he said, "then, of course, we can head to an election process. But a government resignation would have left the country in the lurch."

An angry Antonis Samaras, the head of the main opposition conservatives, insisted Papandreou had to go and dispelled any impression of unity. He argued he had already agreed to back the vital new deal, and demanded quick elections – within the next six weeks if possible.

"Mr. Papandreou pretends that he didn't understand what I told him," he said. "I called on him to resign."

Papandreou "nearly pulled the universe apart to supposedly persuade me to agree to something that I had already said was unavoidable."

He then led his lawmakers in walking out of the parliamentary debate on the confidence vote – although a party official told The Associated Press they would attend the vote itself on Friday.

Amid the political mayhem, Greece's cost of borrowing ballooned, with the interest demanded by markets to buy Greek 10-year bonds exceeding 31 percent – compared with 2 percent for European powerhouse Germany.

Papandreou's surprise referendum announcement so startled world leaders that French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, two architects of the debt deal, summoned Papandreou to Cannes for emergency talks Wednesday.

There, they made clear that if any referendum were held, it would determine whether Greece stayed in the eurozone, and said Athens wouldn't get its $11 billion (euro8 billion) installment of last year's $152 billion (euro110 billion) bailout until the dust had settled.

On Thursday, Obama declared his solidarity with Sarkozy and Merkel, telling G20 leaders that resolving the financial crisis was "the most important aspect of our task over the next two days."

But with parts of the rescue undefined, he added: "We're going to have to flesh out more of the details about how the plan will be fully and decisively implemented."

The drama in Greece sent immediate ripples throughout Europe. Premier Silvio Berlusconi's government in Italy was teetering after it failed to come up with a credible plan to deal with its dangerously high debts, and Portugal demanded more flexible terms for its own bailout.

"It was a surreal farce today ... worthy of a Monty Python film," said Alexis Tsipras, head of a small left-wing party.

Greece's new debt deal would give the country an extra $179 billion (euro130 billion) in rescue loans from the rest of the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund – on top of the $152 billion it was granted a year ago. It would also see banks forgive Athens 50 percent of the money it still owes them. The goal is to reduce Greece's massive debts to the point where the country is able to handle its finances without constant bailouts.

Polls indicate the Greek public is close to the breaking point after more than 20 months of harsh austerity cuts and tax hikes. Recent opinion surveys show 90 percent oppose Papandreou's policies and just 20 percent support his party.

Underlining that point, 300 people held a peaceful anti-austerity protest in central Athens late Thursday.

The past does not bode well for Papandreou: The two other European governments besides Greece that have received bailouts – Portugal and Ireland – have seen their governments fall during the economic turmoil.

___

Associated Press writers Derek Gatopoulos and Nicholas Paphitis in Athens, Colleen Barry in Milan and Jamey Keaten in Cannes contributed to this report.

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ATHENS, Greece — Greece was in turmoil and the world economy in limbo Thursday as a high-stakes game of political brinkmanship in Athens led Prime Minister George Papandreou to abandon his explo...
ATHENS, Greece — Greece was in turmoil and the world economy in limbo Thursday as a high-stakes game of political brinkmanship in Athens led Prime Minister George Papandreou to abandon his explo...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr MOTO
Three Strikes And You're Not Out!
12:25 PM on 11/04/2011
Mr. Moto
“Who oversaw Tarp? Wasn't it Elizabeth Warren?”
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vandegrasse Don't Panic 1942 Fans Become a fan Unfan

17 hours ago (6:56 PM) No, it was not!
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Mr MOTO Three Strikes And You're Not Out! 403 Fans

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November 2008 to July 2011, in the wake of the U.S. financial crisis, she served as chair of the Congressio­nal Oversight Panel created to oversee the Troubled Assets Relief Program.
10:52 AM on 11/04/2011
Kick them out of the EU. It would be better for the EU to hold up. There is probably no way for southern and norther European countries to get along (rather historic perspective if one cares to look at history).
10:51 AM on 11/04/2011
This is going to be hard on low income people
10:40 AM on 11/04/2011
Here it is folks, a politician that made a decision to "let the Greek people have a say in their country, then when he went to the G20 to get chewed out by the German and French party leaders, he all at once did not need the peoples involvement. This attitude is why OWS is such a flame.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stanley Scott
Semper Fi
10:26 AM on 11/04/2011
I hope all Americans are watching the Greek tragedy unfold because this is the path liberals are taking us down. Greeks are so used to being taken care of no one really wants to work anymore! If the US doesn't start making those receiving government aid work for it we'll have a country of takers instead of a strong working society.
10:55 AM on 11/04/2011
Welcome to the "entitlists" (not a word yet) world... Everyone with their hand out. Not exactly what the forefathers envisioned.
10:03 AM on 11/04/2011
I might start supporting OWS now that they're talking about Obama resigning..
09:44 AM on 11/04/2011
So the pm flopped, this is not surprising
10:04 AM on 11/04/2011
Must be related to obama.
09:42 AM on 11/04/2011
So the pm flopped
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smp276dp
free us from the craziness
09:16 AM on 11/04/2011
You have to wonder is he going to so Sryian on his people now? Being pushed to resign he might lose it like Assad did.
08:59 AM on 11/04/2011
We are allowing ourselves to get dragged into dependency on the international level. Recently the economic failure of Greece is being ALLOWED to bring down the global economy, including that of the United States. We give billions of dollars to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) without the approval of the American people, they then turn around and require us to pay into the IMF and dictate certain directions concerning our economy. This same scenario is happening with the G-20, World Bank, International Court, United Nations, World Health Organization, and more. They make it appear that we need to think “global”, and tell us that everything is global today, and this lulls us into giving up everything that our nation was founded upon. The American people have little or nothing to say, even our Congress is circumvented, yet these global organizations are being allowed to incrementally control vital aspects of our country, and in turn, the people of America.

We are on a very dangerous path with our country. We are allowing our Constitution, our democracy, our freedoms, and our sovereignty as a nation to slip away into the hands of international organizations where the American people have no say. Our Founders were genius in forming our great country so that control would be at the local level, not the federal, and certainly not the international level. Yet the current trend is just the opposite, and dangerously so. This trend is a direct threat to our country.
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mac2jr
The truth always wins out
09:18 AM on 11/04/2011
The corporate way of life is to have an ever expanding base of supply and demand, and that cannot happen without going International, and will eventually fail as supply overpowers demand on all fronts.

The second principle of corporate gains is that the less competition one has the more one makes, thus buying up the competition and dissolving it will produce more and more wealth for the few that remain, but this too will fail as there will eventually be no competition and the people will revolt.

The third principle of corporate gain is that there are no rules that can or should be followed, anything done for profit is justifiable and permitted, which is usually immoral or illegal or damaging to the economy, as we have learned.
08:57 AM on 11/04/2011
Greece is a prime example, nations can not survive with massive debts. Bail them out requires them to make changes in spending, pehaps an end to the entilements or at least a level of realism in who gets what and why. A lesson all nations should heed. All can start by reducing the fraud, and inefficiencies, and these do exist: merely look at the cost of social security, medicare and medicaid fraud in America. Then reestablish some measure of personal responsibilty and an understanding that some are smarter, work harder, are innovative,, willing to take risks. These are the job creaters. that they are richer reflects their effforts, stop vilifying them, and respect their efforts. Stop thinking all deserve what they have earned.
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mac2jr
The truth always wins out
09:21 AM on 11/04/2011
The fraud was in the Private market, not the government safety nets. Put the blame where it belongs, the Real Estate Industry, the banking industry, the insurance industry, and the financial Wall Street industry is what put the USA, Europe, and especially Greece into turmoil and near bankruptcy.

Jail those that created the problem, including those that lied us into unfunded illegal wars.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stanley Scott
Semper Fi
10:37 AM on 11/04/2011
The US government is filled with those who are looking to fill their own bank accounts and do little to help the public till it's time for their re election! There have been many thieves on Wall Street but the financial markets drive our economy and make money for pension funds which in turn are paid to those who have retired. Big government is the real problem we spend more than we make and to continue down this path will drive us to the poor house.
08:37 AM on 11/04/2011
The demagogic Papendreou family (George, son Andreas, grandson George) has dominated Greek politics for over 60 years. The elder George engineered the fall of the monarchy when the king opposed his policies. Son Andreas was a free spending prime minister when the prime minister was no longer fettered by a king, and grandson George spent the country into ruin. Hopefully the Greeks will dump the Papendreou family, and not only George.
08:43 AM on 11/04/2011
Also, he was born and educated in the United States.
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mac2jr
The truth always wins out
09:13 AM on 11/04/2011
Born 16 June 1952 (age 59)
Saint Paul, Minnesota, U.S

source: Wikipedia, and the fact that he was born and raised here in the USA speaks volumes to what is going on in Greece.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ogbobbye1pcer
Don't cheat yourself
08:26 AM on 11/04/2011
sometimes things get broken beyond repair, if it cost more to fix it then it is worth maybe it's time to just cut your loss and move on
laurelphot
your micro-bio.
09:02 AM on 11/04/2011
Opposition politicians playing politics. Papandraiou played a political ploy forceing the opposition to get off the fence. He gambled and WON.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bccpn
Links are not posted to be ignored
07:45 AM on 11/04/2011
Wonder how much Obama secretly gave to them? We are broke but he gives our money away like their is an endless supply.
08:26 AM on 11/04/2011
Nothing. Who did? Germany. France. The Brics(Brazil, Russia, India and China). FMI. China is the only country in the world that can help Europe.
10:12 AM on 11/04/2011
So 8 billion is nothing? I wish I had nothing.


Guess Who's Paying For The Greece Bailout? That's Right -- YOU
Henry Blodget|May 03, 2010|22,011|39


3 0
The bailout outrages never stop.

Of the 110-billion Euro Greece bailout, 30-billion (approx $40 billion) will be paid for by the IMF.

The US supplies almost 20% of the IMF's funding (per quotas). So that means US taxpayers are providing ~$8 billion of the $145 billion going to kick the Greek can down the road.



Read more: http://articles.businessinsider.com/2010-05-03/news/30032465_1_bailout-parthenon-aig-creditors#ixzz1ckISEpiK
08:27 AM on 11/04/2011
For years we have been donating countries to which we owe a debt. Seems crazy to me
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bccpn
Links are not posted to be ignored
07:32 AM on 11/04/2011
The report I herd yesterday said not matter what happens Greece will be leaving the Euro and this is the beginning of the fall of the European union. They are talking months when in reality it will take years for this to be settled. Obama again showed his total lack of leadership and economic knowledge telling them to fix in in the next two weeks. The system they have is broken and we have a court jester over there giving advice. Obama cannot solve the issues here who would want his advice.
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mac2jr
The truth always wins out
08:40 AM on 11/04/2011
herd = heard? not = no?

Obama's leadership questioned?

fix in in next two weeks?

Obama cannot solve the issues?