下周一早上醒来最希望看到的# Stock
T*R
1 楼
就是希腊国会第三轮选举难产。
希腊时间比美国早8个小时。不知道国会投票是白天还是晚上。这个计票不花时间。
白天的话,早上开盘时就知道消息。晚上的话,要到下午收盘才能知道了。
执政党现在有168票,还差12票。现在贿赂谣言很多。一票300万欧元。想想也值,万一
左派上台,欧盟就是几千亿的可能损失了。
Samaras appeals to MPs ahead of third vote as early elections loom
In an eleventh-hour effort to bolster the government’s candidate in a
crucial presidential vote Monday that is likely to spark early general
elections, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras made an appeal to undecided
lawmakers over the weekend, saying snap polls would lead to “pointless
upheaval” for the country.
In an interview with state TV NERIT which aired on Saturday evening, Samaras
prodded MPs. Refusing to elect a president would be tantamount to “
political blackmail,” Samaras said, adding that those who vote “present”
in Monday’s ballot at noon would be “burdened with the responsibility”
and would be “remembered by the people and chiefly by history.”
Citing a narrowing of leftist SYRIZA's lead over New Democracy in opinion
polls, Samaras said that early elections “suit me” but he would rather “
lead the ship safely to harbor.”
He lashed out against SYRIZA for pushing for snap polls, saying most
citizens did not want elections, and warning of “fatal perils” that the
path of snap polls could bring amid eurozone jitters. Samaras accused SYRIZA
of “foolish bravado,” adding that the party’s alternative economic
program was full of “unilateral moves.”
The premier said authorities have “sweat blood” in recent years to keep
Greece on its feet and warned against years of sacrifices being lost.
He repeated his calls for a consensus on the president, negotiations on
Greece’s debt and early elections at the end of 2015.
Despite government efforts, the 180-vote minimum required to endorse Dimas,
and put off snap polls, appeared out of reach over the weekend.
With early elections looming, political parties are preparing campaigns and
candidate lists. PASOK in particular is in upheaval as former party leader
and ex-Premier George Papandreou is expected to announce a new party next
week.
Samaras’s appeal came as SYRIZA insists it will seek to renegotiate the
terms of Greece’s bailouts as well as a writedown of the country’s debt.
In an article in the party’s mouthpiece Avgi to be published Sunday,
Tsipras indicates that SYRIZA would not negotiate its economic program with
creditors. “SYRIZA’s national effort will have international repercussions
as our historic responsibility is to open the way for an alternative policy
in Europe, transforming a eurozone country from the subject of a
neoliberalist experiment to a model for social protection and growth,” he
said. In a separate interview in the Efimerida ton Syntakton newspaper,
SYRIZA MP Giorgos Stathakis said the leftists, if elected to power, would
seek “a comprehensive renegotiation of the debt, without unilateral action.”
SYRIZA’s intentions appeared to be rejected out of hand by German Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, who told Saturday’s Bild newspaper that any
Greek government would have to honor existing agreements. “New elections
won’t change anything about Greece’s debts,” he said. “Any new
government must abide by the legal agreements of its predecessors.”
Schaeuble said he would support Greece on its “path of hard reforms” but
that “it will be difficult” if Athens chooses another road.
希腊时间比美国早8个小时。不知道国会投票是白天还是晚上。这个计票不花时间。
白天的话,早上开盘时就知道消息。晚上的话,要到下午收盘才能知道了。
执政党现在有168票,还差12票。现在贿赂谣言很多。一票300万欧元。想想也值,万一
左派上台,欧盟就是几千亿的可能损失了。
Samaras appeals to MPs ahead of third vote as early elections loom
In an eleventh-hour effort to bolster the government’s candidate in a
crucial presidential vote Monday that is likely to spark early general
elections, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras made an appeal to undecided
lawmakers over the weekend, saying snap polls would lead to “pointless
upheaval” for the country.
In an interview with state TV NERIT which aired on Saturday evening, Samaras
prodded MPs. Refusing to elect a president would be tantamount to “
political blackmail,” Samaras said, adding that those who vote “present”
in Monday’s ballot at noon would be “burdened with the responsibility”
and would be “remembered by the people and chiefly by history.”
Citing a narrowing of leftist SYRIZA's lead over New Democracy in opinion
polls, Samaras said that early elections “suit me” but he would rather “
lead the ship safely to harbor.”
He lashed out against SYRIZA for pushing for snap polls, saying most
citizens did not want elections, and warning of “fatal perils” that the
path of snap polls could bring amid eurozone jitters. Samaras accused SYRIZA
of “foolish bravado,” adding that the party’s alternative economic
program was full of “unilateral moves.”
The premier said authorities have “sweat blood” in recent years to keep
Greece on its feet and warned against years of sacrifices being lost.
He repeated his calls for a consensus on the president, negotiations on
Greece’s debt and early elections at the end of 2015.
Despite government efforts, the 180-vote minimum required to endorse Dimas,
and put off snap polls, appeared out of reach over the weekend.
With early elections looming, political parties are preparing campaigns and
candidate lists. PASOK in particular is in upheaval as former party leader
and ex-Premier George Papandreou is expected to announce a new party next
week.
Samaras’s appeal came as SYRIZA insists it will seek to renegotiate the
terms of Greece’s bailouts as well as a writedown of the country’s debt.
In an article in the party’s mouthpiece Avgi to be published Sunday,
Tsipras indicates that SYRIZA would not negotiate its economic program with
creditors. “SYRIZA’s national effort will have international repercussions
as our historic responsibility is to open the way for an alternative policy
in Europe, transforming a eurozone country from the subject of a
neoliberalist experiment to a model for social protection and growth,” he
said. In a separate interview in the Efimerida ton Syntakton newspaper,
SYRIZA MP Giorgos Stathakis said the leftists, if elected to power, would
seek “a comprehensive renegotiation of the debt, without unilateral action.”
SYRIZA’s intentions appeared to be rejected out of hand by German Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, who told Saturday’s Bild newspaper that any
Greek government would have to honor existing agreements. “New elections
won’t change anything about Greece’s debts,” he said. “Any new
government must abide by the legal agreements of its predecessors.”
Schaeuble said he would support Greece on its “path of hard reforms” but
that “it will be difficult” if Athens chooses another road.