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Konstantinos Mitsotakis

Konstantinos Mitsotakis AC (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Μητσοτάκης, Konstantínos Mitsotákis [konstaˈdinos mit͡soˈtacis]; 31 October [O.S. 18 October] 1918 – 29 May 2017) was a Greek politician who was 7th Prime Minister of Greece from 1990 to 1993.[1] He graduated in law and economics from the University of Athens. His son, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, was elected as the Prime Minister of Greece following the 2019 Greek legislative election.

Konstantinos Mitsotakis
Κωνσταντίνος Μητσοτάκης
Mitsotakis in 1992
Prime Minister of Greece
In office
11 April 1990 – 13 October 1993
PresidentChristos Sartzetakis
Konstantinos Karamanlis
Preceded byXenophon Zolotas
Succeeded byAndreas Papandreou
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
14 April 1992 – 7 August 1992
Preceded byAntonis Samaras
Succeeded byMichalis Papakonstantinou
In office
10 May 1980 – 21 October 1981
Prime MinisterGeorgios Rallis
Preceded byGeorge Rallis
Succeeded byIoannis Charalambopoulos
Minister of the Aegean
In office
8 August 1991 – 13 October 1993
Preceded byGeorge Misailidis [el]
Succeeded byKostas Skandalidis
Minister of Coordination
In office
10 May 1978 – 10 May 1980
Prime MinisterKonstantinos Karamanlis
Preceded byGeorge Rallis
Succeeded byIoannis Boutos [el]
In office
17 September 1965 – 22 December 1966
Prime MinisterStefanos Stefanopoulos
Preceded byDimitrios Papaspirou [el]
Succeeded byIoannis Paraskevopoulos
Personal details
Born(1918-10-18)18 October 1918
Halepa, Kingdom of Greece
Died29 May 2017(2017-05-29) (aged 98)
Athens, Greece
Political partyLiberal (1946–1961)
Centre Union (1961–1974)
Independent (1974–1977)
New Liberal (1977–1978)
New Democracy (1978–2017)
Spouse
(m. 1953; died 2012)
ChildrenDora
Kyriakos
Alexandra
Katerina
Alma materUniversity of Athens

Family and personal life

Mitsotakis was born on 31 October 1918[2][3] in Halepa suburb, Chania, Crete, into an already powerful political family, linked to the distinguished statesman Eleftherios Venizelos on both sides. His grandfather Kostis Mitsotakis [el] (1845–1898), a lawyer, journalist and short-time MP of then Ottoman-ruled Crete, founded the Liberal Party, then "Party of the Barefeet" (Κόμμα των Ξυπολήτων) with Venizelos, and married the latter's sister, Katigo Venizelou, Constantine's grandmother. The 1878 Pact of Halepa, granting an Ottoman Crete a certain level of autonomy, was signed in his very home. His father Kyriakos Mitsotakis (senior)  [el] (1883–1944), also MP for Chania in the Greek Parliament (1915–20) and leader of the Cretan volunteers fighting with the Greek army in the First Balkan War, married Stavroula Ploumidaki, daughter of Charalambos Ploumidakis [el], the first Christian mayor of Chania and an MP at the time of the Cretan State, himself a first cousin of Eleftherios Venizelos.[4]

Mitsotakis was married to Marika Mitsotakis (née Giannoukou) from 1953 until her death on 6 May 2012.[5][6] They had four children.[6] His son, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, is the Prime Minister of Greece and since January 2016 leader of the conservative New Democracy party (a position previously held by Mitsotakis), and was a government minister in 2013–15. His first daughter, Dora Bakoyannis, ND Member of Parliament, founder and president of Democratic Alliance party, was the mayor of Athens (2003–2006) and the Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2006 to 2009. His second daughter Alexandra Mitsotakis Gourdain is a Greek civil society activist. His third daughter is Katerina Mitsotakis.

Mitsotakis's interests outside politics included Cretan antiquities and a passion for preserving the environment. He developed a large collection of Minoan and other Cretan antiquities, which he and his wife donated to the Greek state. He was also very interested in promoting reforesting of Greece, including in particular the mountains of Crete.

Venizelos/Mitsotakis family tree

Main members of the Venizelos/Mitsotakis/Bakoyannis family.[7] Prime Ministers of Greece are highlighted in light blue.
Kyriakos Venizelos [la]
(?–1883)
Styliani Ploumidaki
(1830–1897)
Eleftherios Venizelos
(1864–1936)
Katingo Venizelou
(1858–1934)
Constantine "Costis" Mitsotakis [el]
(1845–1898)
Kyriakos Venizelos [el]
(1892–1942)
Sofoklis Venizelos
(1894–1964)
Kyriakos Mitsotakis [el]
(1892–1942)
Stavroula Ploumidaki[8]
(1896–1983)
Nikitas Venizelos
(1930–2020)
Konstantinos Mitsotakis
(1918–2017)
Marika Giannoukou
(1930–2012)
Pavlos Bakoyannis
(1935–1989)
Dora Bakoyannis
née Mitsotaki
(b. 1954)
Kyriakos Mitsotakis
(b. 1968)
Kostas Bakoyannis
(b. 1978)

Political career

Mitsotakis was elected to the Greek Parliament for the first time in 1946, standing for the Liberal Party in his native prefecture of Chania, Crete. He followed most of the old Liberal Party into Georgios Papandreou's Center Union in 1961. But in 1965 he led a group of dissidents, known as the "July apostates", who crossed the floor to bring about the fall of Papandreou's government [el], which earned him the long-time hatred of Papandreou loyalists as well as a significant part of Greek society. He was arrested in 1967 by the military junta but managed to escape to Turkey with a help of Turkish foreign minister İhsan Sabri Çağlayangil and lived in exile with his family in Paris, France, until his return to Greece in 1974, following the restoration of democracy.

In 1974 he campaigned as an independent and failed to be elected to Parliament. He was re-elected in 1977 as founder and leader of the small Party of New Liberals and in 1978 he merged his party with Constantine Karamanlis's New Democracy (ND) party. He served as minister for economic coordination from 1978 to 1980, and as Minister for Foreign Affairs from 1980 to 1981.

The ND government was defeated by Andreas Papandreou's PASOK in 1981, and in 1984 Mitsotakis succeeded Evangelos Averoff as ND leader. He and Andreas Papandreou, the son of Georgios Papandreou, dominated Greek politics for the next decade: their mutual dislike dated back to the fall of Georgios Papandreou's government in 1965.

Mitsotakis soundly defeated Papandreou, embroiled in the Bank of Crete scandal, in the June 1989 election. PASOK lost 36 seats in one of the largest defeats of a sitting government in modern Greek history. However, in a controversial move, Papandreou's government had modified the election system just two months earlier, to require a party to win 50 percent of the vote in order to govern alone. Thus, even though ND was the clear first-place party, with 20 more seats than PASOK, it only won 44 percent of the vote, leaving it six seats short of a majority.

 
Mitsotakis with Spanish Prime Minister Felipe González in 1990

After Mitsotakis failed to garner enough support to form a government, Court of Cassation president Yannis Grivas became acting prime minister and presided over new elections in November 1989. This election yielded the same result as in June. ND finished 20 seats ahead of PASOK, but only won 46.2 percent of the vote and came up three seats short of a majority. Former Bank of Greece president Xenophon Zolotas became interim prime minister and presided over fresh elections in April 1990. The result was the same as the two 1989 elections. ND won a landslide victory, finishing 27 seats ahead of PASOK. However, Mitsotakis was still unable to govern alone, as ND won 150 seats, one short of a majority. Finally, the lone MP from Democratic Renewal agreed to a coalition with ND, allowing Mitsotakis to form government by one seat.

Mitsotakis's government moved swiftly to cut government spending as much as possible, privatise state enterprises and reform the civil service. In foreign policy, Mitsotakis took the initiative to have Greece formally recognize the state of Israel, and moved to reopen talks on American bases in Greece and to restore confidence among Greece's economic and political partners. In June 1990, Mitsotakis became the first Greek Premier to visit the United States since 1974. He promised to meet Greece's NATO obligations, to prevent the use of Greece as a base for terrorism, and to stop the rhetorical attacks on the United States that had been Papandreou's hallmark. Mitsotakis also supported a new dialogue with Turkey, but made progress on the Cyprus dispute a prerequisite for improvement on other issues.

Papandreou, cleared of charges arising from the Bank of Crete scandal in a 7–6 vote at the Eidiko Dikastirio (Special Court), criticised Mitsotakis's government for its economic policies, for not taking a sufficiently strict position over the naming dispute with the newly independent Republic of Macedonia (Mitsotakis favored a composite name such as "Nova Macedonia", for which he was accused at the time of being too lenient) as well as over Cyprus, and for being too pro-American. The heightened public irritation over the Macedonia naming issue caused several ND parliament members, led by Antonis Samaras, to withdraw their support from Mitsotakis's government and form a new political party, Political Spring (Πολιτική Άνοιξη , Politiki Anixi). Mitsotakis' government restored the pre-1989 electoral system, which allowed Papandreou's PASOK to obtain a clear parliamentary majority after winning the premature 1993 elections and return to office. Mitsotakis then resigned as ND leader, although he remained the party's honorary chairman.

In January 2004 Mitsotakis announced that he would retire from Parliament at the 7 March election, 58 years after his first election.

Death

Mitsotakis died on 29 May 2017 in Athens, aged 98 of natural causes[9][10][11] His state funeral was held on 31 May 2017 and he was buried in Chania.[12][13]

Honours

References

  1. ^ "Διατελέσαντες Πρωθυπουργοί". 27 December 2016.
  2. ^ Eleni Panagiotarea (30 July 2013). Greece in the Euro: Economic Delinquency or System Failure?. ECPR Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-1-907301-53-7.
  3. ^ . www.ikm.gr. Archived from the original on 1 June 2017. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  4. ^ Constantine Mitsotakis institute. "Biography - Roots". Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  5. ^ Papapostolou, Anastasios (6 May 2012). "Former First Lady of Greece Marika Mitsotakis Dies at 82". Greek Reporter. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  6. ^ a b Papapostolou, Anastasios (6 May 2012). "Marika Mitsotakis, wife of former Greek PM, dies Dies at 82". Boston.com. Associated Press. Retrieved 26 May 2012.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Constantine Mitsotakis institute. "Biography – Roots". Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  8. ^ Stavroula Ploumidaki is also a first cousin, once removed, of Eleftherios Venizelos
  9. ^ "Former Greek Prime Minister Constantine Mitsotakis dies aged 98". Reuters. 29 May 2017.
  10. ^ "Constantine Mitsotakis, Who Forged Greek-EU Ties, Dies at 98". Bloomberg.com. 29 May 2017 – via www.bloomberg.com.
  11. ^ "Constantine Mitsotakis, Former Prime Minister of Greece, Dies at 98". The New York Times. 29 May 2017.
  12. ^ Makris, A. (31 May 2017). "Thousands Attend Konstantinos Mitsotakis' Funeral Service in Athens - GreekReporter.com".
  13. ^ "Funeral Service for Constantine Mitsotakis at the Metropolitan Cathedral of Athens: (Video & Photo Gallery) - The National Herald". www.thenationalherald.com.
  14. ^ "It's an Honour - Honours - Search Australian Honours". www.itsanhonour.gov.au.

Further reading

  • Wilsford, David, ed. Political leaders of contemporary Western Europe: a biographical dictionary (Greenwood, 1995) pp. 318–23.

External links

  • The Konstantinos Mitsotakis Foundation/Ίδρυμα Κωνσταντίνος Μητσοτάκης 27 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
Political offices
Preceded by
Nikolaos Gazis
Minister of Finance
1963
Succeeded by
Asterios Dais
Preceded by
Asterios Dais
Minister of Finance
1964–1965
Succeeded by
Stylianos Allamanis
Preceded by
Stylianos Allamanis
Minister of Finance
1965
Succeeded by
George Melas
Preceded by Minister of Coordination
1965
Succeeded by
Dimitrios Papaspirou
Preceded by
Dimitrios Papaspirou
Minister of Coordination
1965–1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Coordination
1978–1980
Succeeded by
Ioannis Boutos
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1980–1981
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Greece
1990–1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by
George Misailidis
Minister of the Aegean
1991–1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1992
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by President of New Democracy
1984–1993
Succeeded by

konstantinos, mitsotakis, greek, Κωνσταντίνος, Μητσοτάκης, konstantínos, mitsotákis, konstaˈdinos, soˈtacis, october, october, 1918, 2017, greek, politician, prime, minister, greece, from, 1990, 1993, graduated, economics, from, university, athens, kyriakos, m. Konstantinos Mitsotakis AC Greek Kwnstantinos Mhtsotakhs Konstantinos Mitsotakis konstaˈdinos mit soˈtacis 31 October O S 18 October 1918 29 May 2017 was a Greek politician who was 7th Prime Minister of Greece from 1990 to 1993 1 He graduated in law and economics from the University of Athens His son Kyriakos Mitsotakis was elected as the Prime Minister of Greece following the 2019 Greek legislative election Konstantinos MitsotakisACKwnstantinos MhtsotakhsMitsotakis in 1992Prime Minister of GreeceIn office 11 April 1990 13 October 1993PresidentChristos SartzetakisKonstantinos KaramanlisPreceded byXenophon ZolotasSucceeded byAndreas PapandreouMinister of Foreign AffairsIn office 14 April 1992 7 August 1992Preceded byAntonis SamarasSucceeded byMichalis PapakonstantinouIn office 10 May 1980 21 October 1981Prime MinisterGeorgios RallisPreceded byGeorge RallisSucceeded byIoannis CharalambopoulosMinister of the AegeanIn office 8 August 1991 13 October 1993Preceded byGeorge Misailidis el Succeeded byKostas SkandalidisMinister of CoordinationIn office 10 May 1978 10 May 1980Prime MinisterKonstantinos KaramanlisPreceded byGeorge RallisSucceeded byIoannis Boutos el In office 17 September 1965 22 December 1966Prime MinisterStefanos StefanopoulosPreceded byDimitrios Papaspirou el Succeeded byIoannis ParaskevopoulosPersonal detailsBorn 1918 10 18 18 October 1918Halepa Kingdom of GreeceDied29 May 2017 2017 05 29 aged 98 Athens GreecePolitical partyLiberal 1946 1961 Centre Union 1961 1974 Independent 1974 1977 New Liberal 1977 1978 New Democracy 1978 2017 SpouseMarika Giannoukou m 1953 died 2012 wbr ChildrenDoraKyriakosAlexandraKaterinaAlma materUniversity of Athens Contents 1 Family and personal life 1 1 Venizelos Mitsotakis family tree 2 Political career 3 Death 4 Honours 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksFamily and personal life EditMitsotakis was born on 31 October 1918 2 3 in Halepa suburb Chania Crete into an already powerful political family linked to the distinguished statesman Eleftherios Venizelos on both sides His grandfather Kostis Mitsotakis el 1845 1898 a lawyer journalist and short time MP of then Ottoman ruled Crete founded the Liberal Party then Party of the Barefeet Komma twn 3ypolhtwn with Venizelos and married the latter s sister Katigo Venizelou Constantine s grandmother The 1878 Pact of Halepa granting an Ottoman Crete a certain level of autonomy was signed in his very home His father Kyriakos Mitsotakis senior el 1883 1944 also MP for Chania in the Greek Parliament 1915 20 and leader of the Cretan volunteers fighting with the Greek army in the First Balkan War married Stavroula Ploumidaki daughter of Charalambos Ploumidakis el the first Christian mayor of Chania and an MP at the time of the Cretan State himself a first cousin of Eleftherios Venizelos 4 Mitsotakis was married to Marika Mitsotakis nee Giannoukou from 1953 until her death on 6 May 2012 5 6 They had four children 6 His son Kyriakos Mitsotakis is the Prime Minister of Greece and since January 2016 leader of the conservative New Democracy party a position previously held by Mitsotakis and was a government minister in 2013 15 His first daughter Dora Bakoyannis ND Member of Parliament founder and president of Democratic Alliance party was the mayor of Athens 2003 2006 and the Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2006 to 2009 His second daughter Alexandra Mitsotakis Gourdain is a Greek civil society activist His third daughter is Katerina Mitsotakis Mitsotakis s interests outside politics included Cretan antiquities and a passion for preserving the environment He developed a large collection of Minoan and other Cretan antiquities which he and his wife donated to the Greek state He was also very interested in promoting reforesting of Greece including in particular the mountains of Crete Venizelos Mitsotakis family tree Edit Main members of the Venizelos Mitsotakis Bakoyannis family 7 Prime Ministers of Greece are highlighted in light blue Kyriakos Venizelos la 1883 Styliani Ploumidaki 1830 1897 Eleftherios Venizelos 1864 1936 Katingo Venizelou 1858 1934 Constantine Costis Mitsotakis el 1845 1898 Kyriakos Venizelos el 1892 1942 Sofoklis Venizelos 1894 1964 Kyriakos Mitsotakis el 1892 1942 Stavroula Ploumidaki 8 1896 1983 Nikitas Venizelos 1930 2020 Konstantinos Mitsotakis 1918 2017 Marika Giannoukou 1930 2012 Pavlos Bakoyannis 1935 1989 Dora Bakoyannisnee Mitsotaki b 1954 Kyriakos Mitsotakis b 1968 Kostas Bakoyannis b 1978 Political career EditMitsotakis was elected to the Greek Parliament for the first time in 1946 standing for the Liberal Party in his native prefecture of Chania Crete He followed most of the old Liberal Party into Georgios Papandreou s Center Union in 1961 But in 1965 he led a group of dissidents known as the July apostates who crossed the floor to bring about the fall of Papandreou s government el which earned him the long time hatred of Papandreou loyalists as well as a significant part of Greek society He was arrested in 1967 by the military junta but managed to escape to Turkey with a help of Turkish foreign minister Ihsan Sabri Caglayangil and lived in exile with his family in Paris France until his return to Greece in 1974 following the restoration of democracy In 1974 he campaigned as an independent and failed to be elected to Parliament He was re elected in 1977 as founder and leader of the small Party of New Liberals and in 1978 he merged his party with Constantine Karamanlis s New Democracy ND party He served as minister for economic coordination from 1978 to 1980 and as Minister for Foreign Affairs from 1980 to 1981 The ND government was defeated by Andreas Papandreou s PASOK in 1981 and in 1984 Mitsotakis succeeded Evangelos Averoff as ND leader He and Andreas Papandreou the son of Georgios Papandreou dominated Greek politics for the next decade their mutual dislike dated back to the fall of Georgios Papandreou s government in 1965 Mitsotakis soundly defeated Papandreou embroiled in the Bank of Crete scandal in the June 1989 election PASOK lost 36 seats in one of the largest defeats of a sitting government in modern Greek history However in a controversial move Papandreou s government had modified the election system just two months earlier to require a party to win 50 percent of the vote in order to govern alone Thus even though ND was the clear first place party with 20 more seats than PASOK it only won 44 percent of the vote leaving it six seats short of a majority Mitsotakis with Spanish Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez in 1990 After Mitsotakis failed to garner enough support to form a government Court of Cassation president Yannis Grivas became acting prime minister and presided over new elections in November 1989 This election yielded the same result as in June ND finished 20 seats ahead of PASOK but only won 46 2 percent of the vote and came up three seats short of a majority Former Bank of Greece president Xenophon Zolotas became interim prime minister and presided over fresh elections in April 1990 The result was the same as the two 1989 elections ND won a landslide victory finishing 27 seats ahead of PASOK However Mitsotakis was still unable to govern alone as ND won 150 seats one short of a majority Finally the lone MP from Democratic Renewal agreed to a coalition with ND allowing Mitsotakis to form government by one seat Mitsotakis s government moved swiftly to cut government spending as much as possible privatise state enterprises and reform the civil service In foreign policy Mitsotakis took the initiative to have Greece formally recognize the state of Israel and moved to reopen talks on American bases in Greece and to restore confidence among Greece s economic and political partners In June 1990 Mitsotakis became the first Greek Premier to visit the United States since 1974 He promised to meet Greece s NATO obligations to prevent the use of Greece as a base for terrorism and to stop the rhetorical attacks on the United States that had been Papandreou s hallmark Mitsotakis also supported a new dialogue with Turkey but made progress on the Cyprus dispute a prerequisite for improvement on other issues Papandreou cleared of charges arising from the Bank of Crete scandal in a 7 6 vote at the Eidiko Dikastirio Special Court criticised Mitsotakis s government for its economic policies for not taking a sufficiently strict position over the naming dispute with the newly independent Republic of Macedonia Mitsotakis favored a composite name such as Nova Macedonia for which he was accused at the time of being too lenient as well as over Cyprus and for being too pro American The heightened public irritation over the Macedonia naming issue caused several ND parliament members led by Antonis Samaras to withdraw their support from Mitsotakis s government and form a new political party Political Spring Politikh Anoi3h Politiki Anixi Mitsotakis government restored the pre 1989 electoral system which allowed Papandreou s PASOK to obtain a clear parliamentary majority after winning the premature 1993 elections and return to office Mitsotakis then resigned as ND leader although he remained the party s honorary chairman In January 2004 Mitsotakis announced that he would retire from Parliament at the 7 March election 58 years after his first election Death EditMitsotakis died on 29 May 2017 in Athens aged 98 of natural causes 9 10 11 His state funeral was held on 31 May 2017 and he was buried in Chania 12 13 Honours Edit Australia Companion of the Order of Australia Honorary 6 January 1992 14 References Edit Diatelesantes Prw8ypoyrgoi 27 December 2016 Eleni Panagiotarea 30 July 2013 Greece in the Euro Economic Delinquency or System Failure ECPR Press p 176 ISBN 978 1 907301 53 7 Idryma Kwnstantinos K Mhtsotakhs Rizes Neanika Xronia Antistash www ikm gr Archived from the original on 1 June 2017 Retrieved 29 May 2017 Constantine Mitsotakis institute Biography Roots Retrieved 23 December 2015 Papapostolou Anastasios 6 May 2012 Former First Lady of Greece Marika Mitsotakis Dies at 82 Greek Reporter Retrieved 26 May 2012 a b Papapostolou Anastasios 6 May 2012 Marika Mitsotakis wife of former Greek PM dies Dies at 82 Boston com Associated Press Retrieved 26 May 2012 permanent dead link Constantine Mitsotakis institute Biography Roots Retrieved 23 December 2015 Stavroula Ploumidaki is also a first cousin once removed of Eleftherios Venizelos Former Greek Prime Minister Constantine Mitsotakis dies aged 98 Reuters 29 May 2017 Constantine Mitsotakis Who Forged Greek EU Ties Dies at 98 Bloomberg com 29 May 2017 via www bloomberg com Constantine Mitsotakis Former Prime Minister of Greece Dies at 98 The New York Times 29 May 2017 Makris A 31 May 2017 Thousands Attend Konstantinos Mitsotakis Funeral Service in Athens GreekReporter com Funeral Service for Constantine Mitsotakis at the Metropolitan Cathedral of Athens Video amp Photo Gallery The National Herald www thenationalherald com It s an Honour Honours Search Australian Honours www itsanhonour gov au Further reading EditWilsford David ed Political leaders of contemporary Western Europe a biographical dictionary Greenwood 1995 pp 318 23 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Konstantinos Mitsotakis The Konstantinos Mitsotakis Foundation Idryma Kwnstantinos Mhtsotakhs Archived 27 September 2013 at the Wayback MachinePolitical officesPreceded byNikolaos Gazis Minister of Finance1963 Succeeded byAsterios DaisPreceded byAsterios Dais Minister of Finance1964 1965 Succeeded byStylianos AllamanisPreceded byStylianos Allamanis Minister of Finance1965 Succeeded byGeorge MelasPreceded byGeorgios Mavros Minister of Coordination1965 Succeeded byDimitrios PapaspirouPreceded byDimitrios Papaspirou Minister of Coordination1965 1966 Succeeded byIoannis ParaskevopoulosPreceded byGeorge Rallis Minister of Coordination1978 1980 Succeeded byIoannis BoutosMinister of Foreign Affairs1980 1981 Succeeded byIoannis CharalambopoulosPreceded byXenophon Zolotas Prime Minister of Greece1990 1993 Succeeded byAndreas PapandreouPreceded byGeorge Misailidis Minister of the Aegean1991 1993 Succeeded byKostas SkandalidisPreceded byAntonis Samaras Minister of Foreign Affairs1992 Succeeded byMichalis PapakonstantinouParty political officesPreceded byEvangelos Averoff President of New Democracy1984 1993 Succeeded byMiltiadis Evert Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Konstantinos Mitsotakis amp oldid 1131787060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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