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New Democracy (Greece)

New Democracy (ND; Greek: Νέα Δημοκρατία, romanizedNéa Dimokratía, IPA: [ˈnea ðimokraˈti.a]) is a liberal-conservative,[3][4][5] political party in Greece. In contemporary Greek politics, New Democracy has been the main centre-right[6] political party and one of the two major parties along with its historic rival, the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK). New Democracy and PASOK were created in the wake of the toppling of the military junta in 1974, and ruled Greece alternately for the next four decades. Following the electoral decline of PASOK, New Democracy remained one of the two major parties in Greece, the other being the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA).

New Democracy
Νέα Δημοκρατία
Néa Dimokratía
AbbreviationND (ΝΔ)
PresidentKyriakos Mitsotakis
Vice PresidentsAdonis Georgiadis[1]
Kostis Hatzidakis[1]
SecretaryPavlos Marinakis
SpokespersonAnastasios Gaitanis
FounderKonstantinos Karamanlis
Founded4 October 1974; 48 years ago (1974-10-04)
Preceded byNational Radical Union, Centre Union
Youth wingYouth Organisation of New Democracy
FoundationConstantinos Karamanlis Institute for Democracy
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right
European affiliationEuropean People's Party
International affiliationCentrist Democrat International
International Democrat Union
European Parliament groupEuropean People's Party
Colours  Blue
Anthem
"Νέα Δημοκρατία"[2]
"New Democracy"
Parliament
156 / 300
European Parliament
7 / 21
Regional Governors
12 / 13
Regional Councilors
332 / 703
Mayors
35 / 332
Party flag
Website
nd.gr

Having spent four and a half years in opposition to SYRIZA's government, New Democracy regained its majority in the Hellenic Parliament and returned to government under Kyriakos Mitsotakis after the 2019 legislative election.

The support of New Democracy comes from a wide electorate base ranging from centrists to conservatives, and nationalists to post-modernists. From a geographical perspective, its main support base is in the rural areas of Greece as well as the city centers of Athens and Thessaloniki. Its support is generally weaker in areas like, Arta, Achaia and Crete, with the exception of some parts in Chania and Rethymno. Traditionally, New Democracy receives greatest percentages in Laconia, Messenia, Kastoria and Serres.

The party was founded in 1974 by Konstantinos Karamanlis and in the same year it formed the first cabinet of the Third Hellenic Republic. New Democracy is a member of the European People's Party, the largest European political party since 1999, the Centrist Democrat International,[7] and the International Democrat Union.[8]

History

Foundation

 
Konstantinos Karamanlis, founder of New Democracy

New Democracy was founded on 4 October 1974 by Konstantinos Karamanlis, in the beginning of the metapolitefsi era following the fall of the Greek military junta.[9] Karamanlis, who had already served as Prime Minister of Greece from 1955 to 1963, was sworn in as the first Prime Minister of the Third Hellenic Republic in a national unity government on 24 July 1974, until the first free elections of the new era. He intended New Democracy to be a more modern and progressive political party than the right-wing parties that ruled Greece before the 1967 Greek coup d'état, including his own National Radical Union (ERE). The party's ideology was defined as "radical liberalism", a term defined as "the prevalence of free market rules with the decisive intervention of the state in favour of social justice." The party was formed out of dissident members the pre-Junta Centre Union and National Radical Union, both of former Monarchists and Venizelists.

First government (1974–1981)

In the 1974 legislative election, New Democracy obtained a massive parliamentary majority of 220 seats with a record 54.37% of the vote, a result attributed to the personal appeal of Karamanlis to the electorate. Karamanlis was elected as Prime Minister and soon decided to hold a referendum on 8 December 1974 for the issue of the form of government; with a large majority of 69.17%, monarchy was eventually abolished in favour of a republic. The next major issue for the New Democracy cabinet was the creation of the Constitution of Greece, which entered into force in 1975 and established Greece as a parliamentary republic. On 12 June 1975, Greece applied to join the European Communities, of which it was already an associate member since 1961, while it had already been readmitted to the Council of Europe on 28 November 1974.

In the 1977 election, New Democracy won again a large parliamentary majority of 171 seats, albeit with a reduced percentage of popular vote (41.84%). Under Karamanlis, Greece redefined its relations with NATO and tried to resolve the Cyprus dispute following the Turkish invasion of the island. In 1979, the first conference of the party was held in Chalkidiki, where its ideological principles defined under the term "radical liberalism" were unanimously approved, as well as its statute and the operating regulations of its organizations.[10] It was the first conference of any Greek political party whose delegates were elected by the members.[10]

Karamanlis' vision concerning the accession of Greece into the European Communities, despite the resolute opposition of the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) and the Communist Party of Greece (KKE),[11] led to the signing of the Treaty of Accession on 28 May 1979 in Athens; following the ratification of the act by the Hellenic Parliament on 28 June 1979, Greece became the tenth member state of the European Communities on 1 January 1981. Karamanlis was criticised by opposing parties for not holding a referendum,[12] even though Greece's accession into the European Communities had been in the forefront of New Democracy's political platform, under which the party had been elected to power.[12] Meanwhile, Karamanlis relinquished the premiership in 1980 and was elected as President of Greece by the parliament, serving until 1985. Georgios Rallis was elected as the new leader of New Democracy and succeeded Karamanlis in premiership.

Opposition and Mitsotakis' rise to power (1981–1989)

Under the leadership of Georgios Rallis, New Democracy was defeated in the 1981 legislative elections by Andreas Papandreou's PASOK which ran on a left-wing progressive platform, and was placed in opposition for a first time with 35.87% share of the vote and 115 seats. On the same day, on 18 October 1981, New Democracy was also defeated in the first Greek election to the European Parliament. In the following December, the party's parliamentary group elected Evangelos Averoff, former Minister for National Defence, as president of New Democracy, but he resigned in 1984 due to health problems. On 1 September 1984, Konstantinos Mitsotakis succeeded him in the party's presidency and he managed to increase its percentage in the 1985 elections to 40.85%, although it was defeated again and remained in opposition.

Second government (1989–1993)

 
Konstantinos Mitsotakis and Süleyman Demirel (Prime Ministers of Greece and Turkey respectively) in the 1992 World Economic Forum

Mitsotakis led New Democracy to a clear win in the June 1989 legislative elections registering 44.28% of the vote but, due to the modification of the electoral law by the outbound PASOK government, New Democracy obtained only 145 seats which were not enough to form a government on its own. The aftermath was the formation of a coalition government under Tzannis Tzannetakis, consisted of New Democracy and Coalition of the Left and Progress (Synaspismos), with the latter also including at the time the Communist Party of Greece. In the subsequent elections of November 1989, New Democracy took one more comfortable win, increasing its share to 46.19% of the vote and 148 seats but, under the same electoral law, they were still short of forming a government and this led to a national unity government along with PASOK and Synaspismos, under Xenophon Zolotas.

Eventually, in the 1990 election Mitsotakis' New Democracy defeated once again Papandreou's PASOK with a lead of 8.28%, but this time the 46.89% of votes awarded them with 150 seats, which allowed Mitsotakis to form a majority in the parliament with the support of Democratic Renewal's (DIANA) sole member of parliament and one more seat given by the Supreme Special Court, after a mistake in seat calculation was detected. After three consecutive wide wins with high vote percentages, Mitsotakis became the 178th Prime Minister of Greece and the 7th Prime Minister of the 3rd Hellenic Republic though with a slim parliamentary majority of 152 seats due to the electoral law in force at the time.

In a turbulent international political environment following the 1989 Fall of Communism in Europe, Mitsotakis' government focused on cutting government spending, the privatization of state enterprises, the reformation of the public administration and the restoration of the original electoral system, with the addition of an election threshold of 3%. In foreign policy, the priorities were the restoration of confidence among Greece's economic and political partners, NATO and the United States. Mitsotakis also supported a new dialogue with Turkey on the Cyprus dispute and a compromise over the Macedonia naming dispute; the latter triggered an irritation among the MPs of New Democracy, which led Antonis Samaras to leave it and form a new political party in June 1993, Political Spring; one more withdrawal later from its parliamentary group resulted in New Democracy's loss of the majority in the parliament and the call of early elections.

Opposition (1993–2004)

In the 1993 elections, New Democracy suffered an easy defeat with 39.30% of the vote, something that led to Mitsotakis' resignation and the election of Miltiadis Evert in the party's leadership. In the early 1996 legislative election, New Democracy was defeated again by Costas Simitis' PASOK registering 38.12%, but Evert obtained a re-election as the party's leader in the same year. However, in the spring of 1997 a new conference took place, in order to elect a new president among others. Kostas Karamanlis, nephew of the party's founder, was elected the sixth president of New Democracy.

Under Karamanlis, New Democracy experienced an evident increase in popularity, but in the 2000 elections they lost by only 1.06% of the popular vote, the smallest margin in modern Greek history, registering 42.74% and obtaining 125 seats in the parliament. By 2003, New Democracy was consistently leading Simitis' PASOK in opinion polls; in January 2004 Simitis resigned and announced elections for 7 March, while George Papandreou succeeded him in PASOK's leadership.

Third government (2004–2009)

Despite speculation that Papandreou would succeed in restoring the party's fortunes, in the 2004 election Karamanlis managed to take a clear win with 45.36% of the vote and 165 seats, and New Democracy returned to power after eleven years in opposition, scoring an all-time record of 3,359,682 votes in the history of Greek elections. The regions that consistently support New Democracy include the Peloponnese, Central Macedonia and West Macedonia. On the other hand, the party is weak in Crete, the Aegean Islands, Attica and West Greece.

 
Kostas Karamanlis giving an interview at a 2008 EPP summit

On 16 September 2007, Kostas Karamanlis won re-election with a diminished majority in Parliament, and stated: "Thank you for your trust. You have spoken loud and clear and chosen the course the country will take in the next few years." George Papandreou, PASOK, accepted defeat (New Democracy party with 41.84%, and opposition party PASOK had 38.1%).[13]

2009 defeat

 
Political campaign of party New Democracy before the European Parliament election in Greece in 2009.
 
Kiosk of New Democracy in Athens for the 2009 Greek legislative election.

On 2 September 2009 Karamanlis announced his intention to call an election, although one was not required until September 2011.[14] The parliament was dissolved on 9 September, and the 2009 legislative election was held on 4 October. New Democracy's share of the parliamentary vote dropped to 33.47% (down by 8.37%) and they won only 91 of 300 seats, dropping by 61 since the last election.[15] The rival PASOK soared to 43.92% (up 5.82%), and took 160 seats (up 58).[15] The 33.5% tally marked a historic low for the party since its founding in 1974.[16] Karamanlis conceded defeat and stated that he would resign as a leader of New Democracy, and would not stand as a candidate at the next party election.[17] Two former Ministers for Foreign Affairs, Dora Bakoyannis and Antonis Samaras, as well as Thessaloniki Prefect Panagiotis Psomiadis were announced as candidates,[18] with Samaras being the favorite to win.[19]

On 29 November 2009, Antonis Samaras was elected the new leader of New Democracy by the party base at the 2009 leadership election.[20] Following early results showing Samaras in the lead, his main rival Dora Bakoyannis conceded defeat and congratulated Samaras for his election;[21] later she left New Democracy to found her own party, Democratic Alliance. Samaras himself had also left New Democracy in 1992 because of his hard stance on the Macedonia naming dispute and found his own party, Political Spring; he returned to New Democracy in 2004.[22]

2011 government debt crisis

New Democracy was in opposition during the first phase (2009–11) of the Greek government debt crisis which included the First bailout package agreed in May 2010. The party did not support the first EU/IMF rescue package of May 2010 and the three related austerity packages of March 2010, May 2010 and June 2011.[23][24][25] Further measures were agreed by prime minister George Papandreou with the EU and private banks and insurers on 27 October 2011. The aim was to complete negotiations by the end of the year and put in place a full Second bailout package to supplement the one agreed in May 2010.[26] Samaras initially blasted the deal.[27] In reality New Democracy had dismissed cross-party agreement even before the deal was agreed.[28]

A few days later, Papandreou announced a surprise referendum.[29] During the frantic negotiations that followed, Samaras offered to support the austerity package he had initially condemned if Papandreou resigned and an interim government be appointed to lead the country to elections early in the new year.[30]

The referendum was never held, and Papandreou resigned in early November 2011. New Democracy supported the new national unity government headed by Lucas Papademos; however the party's support for austerity appeared lukewarm at first.[31][32]

 
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras in 2012

Within a few days, party officials spoke of "renegotiating" existing agreements with the EU and IMF.[33] EU partners requested that Samaras sign a letter committing him to the terms of the rescue package, in what was seen as an effort to keep the nationalist elements of his party happy. Samaras argued that his word should be enough and that the demand for a written commitment was "humiliating".[34] Both Papademos and the EU insisted on a written commitment. New Democracy repeated its call for new elections.[35] Samaras was said to be infuriating European leaders by only partly backing the international reform programme.[36] A meeting of Eurozone's Finance Ministers was postponed in February 2012, when it became apparent that not all the main political parties were willing to pledge to honour the conditions demanded in return for the rescue package; a day later Samaras reversed course and wrote to the European Commission and IMF, promising to implement the austerity measures if his party were to win a general election in April.[37] German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble suggested postponing the election and setting up a small technocratic cabinet like Italy's to run Greece for the next two years.[37]

Fourth government with PASOK (2012–2015)

In May 2012 general election, the New Democracy regained the largest party but could not obtain a majority. Anti-austerity leftist SYRIZA, led by Alexis Tsipras became the second largest party and refused to negotiate with New Democracy and PASOK. After the general election the New Democracy could not form a coalition government.

New Democracy during its rule introduced a strict immigration policy, and proposed strengthening this policy as part of its political agenda.[38]

In opposition (2015–2019)

In its electoral campaign for the January 2015 legislative election, Samaras promised to continue with his plan to exit the bailout and return to growth by further privatizations, a corporate tax rate reduced to 15 percent and a recapitalization of Greece's banks.[39] The party received a total of €747,214 of state funding, the largest share of all political parties in Greece.[40] In the election, ND was defeated by SYRIZA. On 5 July 2015 Samaras stepped down from party leadership.[41]

New Democracy was once again defeated by SYRIZA in the September 2015 legislative election, but maintained its number of seats in the Hellenic Parliament. On 10 January 2016 Kyriakos Mitsotakis was elected as new party leader.[42]

On 4 October 2018, the party adopted a new logo.[43]

Fifth government (2019–present)

In the 2019 legislative election, New Democracy won 158 seats in the 300-seat Hellenic Parliament, a majority of the seats,[44] enabling it to form a government on its own under Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Mitsotakis' efforts to deal with the prolonged lockdown in Greece received widespread praise from Greek and International press,[45][46][47] analysts,[48] and academics,[49] for the well-structured approach and continuous reliance on scientific expertise of the Greek pandemic task force, headed by Sotiris Tsiodras.[50] In 2021, the country managed to keep the new cases of COVID-19 to low levels by enforcing back to back strict lockdowns in Athens and Thessaloniki, and enabling different emergency protocols for rural areas.[51] At the same time the government focused on tackling the pandemic before the launch of the 2021 summer tourist season in an attempt to boost the country's economy.[52][53]

During Mitsotakis' term as PM, he has received praise for being pro-European and governing technocratic,[54] his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic,[55][56] his handling of migration,[57] and his handling of the Greek economy, with Greece being named the Top Economic Performer for 2022 by the Economist.[58] This was in particular due to Greece in 2022 being able to repay ahead of schedule 2.7 billion euros ($2.87 billion) of loans owed to euro zone countries under the first bailout it received during its decade-long debt crisis.[59] Although Mitsotakis has also received criticism as Greece has experienced a democratic backsliding and heightened corruption,[60] with a deterioration of freedom of the press,[61][62][63] and was marred by the Novartis corruption scandal,[64][65] the 2022 wiretapping scandal[66] and the fatal 2023 Tempi train collision.

Ideology

New Democracy political position has been placed as centre-right.[67][68][69][70][71][72][73][74] The main ideologies of the party have been described as liberal-conservative,[3][4][5] or conservative liberal,[75] Christian democratic,[5][76] and with a pro-European stance.[77]

Electoral history

Hellenic Parliament elections

Popular vote in Greek legislative elections

Election Hellenic Parliament Rank Government Leader
Votes % ±pp Seats won +/−
1974 2,669,133 54.37% New
220 / 300
  220 #1 Government Konstantinos Karamanlis
1977 2,146,365 41.84% -12.53
171 / 300
  49 #1 Government
1981 2,034,496 35.88% -5.96
115 / 300
  56 #2 Opposition Georgios Rallis
1985 2,599,681 40.85% +4.97
126 / 300
  11 #2 Opposition Constantine Mitsotakis
June 1989 2,887,488 44.28% +3.43
145 / 300
  19 #1 Minority government
then caretaker
November 1989 3,093,479 46.19% +1.91
148 / 300
  3 #1 Caretaker government
1990 3,088,137 46.89% +0.70
150 / 300
  2 #1 Government
1993 2,711,737 39.30% -7.59
111 / 300
  39 #2 Opposition
1996 2,586,089 38.12% -1.18
108 / 300
  3 #2 Opposition Miltiadis Evert
2000 2,935,196 42.74% +4.62
125 / 300
  17 #2 Opposition Kostas Karamanlis
2004 3,360,424 45.36% +2.62
165 / 300
  40 #1 Government
2007 2,994,979 41.87% -3.49
152 / 300
  13 #1 Government
2009 2,295,967 33.47% -8.40
91 / 300
  61 #2 Opposition
May 2012 1,192,103 18.85% -14.62
108 / 300
  17 #1 Caretaker government Antonis Samaras
June 2012 1,825,497 29.66% +10.81
129 / 300
  21 #1 Coalition government
January 2015 1,718,694 27.81% -1.85
76 / 300
  53 #2 Opposition
September 2015 1,526,205 28.09% +0.28
75 / 300
  1 #2 Opposition Vangelis Meimarakis
2019 2,251,411 39.85% +11.76
158 / 300
  83 #1 Government Kyriakos Mitsotakis

European Parliament elections

European Parliament
Election Votes % ±pp Seats won +/− Rank Leader
1981 1,779,462 31.3% New
8 / 24
  8 #2 Georgios Rallis
1984 2,266,568 38.1% +6.8
9 / 24
  1 #2 Evangelos Averoff
1989 2,647,215 40.5% +2.4
10 / 24
  1 #1 Constantine Mitsotakis
1994 2,133,372 32.7% -7.8
9 / 25
  1 #2 Miltiadis Evert
1999 2,314,371 36.0% +3.3
9 / 25
  0 #1 Kostas Karamanlis
2004A 2,633,961 43.0% +4.7
11 / 24
  2 #1
2009 1,655,636 32.3% -10.7
8 / 22
  3 #2
2014 1,298,713 22.7% -9.6
5 / 21
  3 #2 Antonis Samaras
2019 1,872,814 33.1% +10.4
8 / 21
  3 #1 Kyriakos Mitsotakis

A 2004 results are compared to the combined totals for ND and POLAN totals in the 1999 election.

Party leaders

# Leader Portrait Term of office Prime Minister
1 Konstantinos Karamanlis   4 October 1974 8 May 1980 1974–1980
2 Georgios Rallis   8 May 1980 9 December 1981 1980–1981
3 Evangelos Averoff   9 December 1981 1 September 1984
4 Konstantinos Mitsotakis   1 September 1984 3 November 1993 (Tzannetakis 1989)
1990–1993
5 Miltiadis Evert 3 November 1993 21 March 1997
6 Kostas Karamanlis   21 March 1997 30 November 2009 2004–2009
7 Antonis Samaras   30 November 2009 5 July 2015 2012–2015
Vangelis Meimarakis
(interim)
  5 July 2015 25 November 2015
Ioannis Plakiotakis
(interim)
  25 November 2015 10 January 2016
8 Kyriakos Mitsotakis[78]   10 January 2016 Incumbent 2019–present

Symbols

The traditional symbol of the party has been the freedom torch, incorporated in its logo, albeit in a stylized form in the logo adopted in 2018.

Logos

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  76. ^ Lawrence Ezrow (2011). "Electoral systems and party responsiveness". In Norman Schofield; Gonzalo Caballero (eds.). Political Economy of Institutions, Democracy and Voting. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 320. ISBN 978-3-642-19519-8.
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External links

  • Official website (in Greek)
  • ND list of MPs_Vouliwatch.gr

democracy, greece, democracy, greek, Νέα, Δημοκρατία, romanized, néa, dimokratía, ˈnea, ðimokraˈti, liberal, conservative, political, party, greece, contemporary, greek, politics, democracy, been, main, centre, right, political, party, major, parties, along, w. New Democracy ND Greek Nea Dhmokratia romanized Nea Dimokratia IPA ˈnea dimokraˈti a is a liberal conservative 3 4 5 political party in Greece In contemporary Greek politics New Democracy has been the main centre right 6 political party and one of the two major parties along with its historic rival the Panhellenic Socialist Movement PASOK New Democracy and PASOK were created in the wake of the toppling of the military junta in 1974 and ruled Greece alternately for the next four decades Following the electoral decline of PASOK New Democracy remained one of the two major parties in Greece the other being the Coalition of the Radical Left SYRIZA New Democracy Nea Dhmokratia Nea DimokratiaAbbreviationND ND PresidentKyriakos MitsotakisVice PresidentsAdonis Georgiadis 1 Kostis Hatzidakis 1 SecretaryPavlos MarinakisSpokespersonAnastasios GaitanisFounderKonstantinos KaramanlisFounded4 October 1974 48 years ago 1974 10 04 Preceded byNational Radical Union Centre UnionYouth wingYouth Organisation of New DemocracyFoundationConstantinos Karamanlis Institute for DemocracyIdeologyLiberal conservatismChristian democracyPro EuropeanismPolitical positionCentre rightEuropean affiliationEuropean People s PartyInternational affiliationCentrist Democrat InternationalInternational Democrat UnionEuropean Parliament groupEuropean People s PartyColours BlueAnthem Nea Dhmokratia 2 New Democracy Parliament156 300European Parliament7 21Regional Governors12 13Regional Councilors332 703Mayors35 332Party flagWebsitend wbr grPolitics of GreecePolitical partiesElectionsHaving spent four and a half years in opposition to SYRIZA s government New Democracy regained its majority in the Hellenic Parliament and returned to government under Kyriakos Mitsotakis after the 2019 legislative election The support of New Democracy comes from a wide electorate base ranging from centrists to conservatives and nationalists to post modernists From a geographical perspective its main support base is in the rural areas of Greece as well as the city centers of Athens and Thessaloniki Its support is generally weaker in areas like Arta Achaia and Crete with the exception of some parts in Chania and Rethymno Traditionally New Democracy receives greatest percentages in Laconia Messenia Kastoria and Serres The party was founded in 1974 by Konstantinos Karamanlis and in the same year it formed the first cabinet of the Third Hellenic Republic New Democracy is a member of the European People s Party the largest European political party since 1999 the Centrist Democrat International 7 and the International Democrat Union 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 First government 1974 1981 1 3 Opposition and Mitsotakis rise to power 1981 1989 1 4 Second government 1989 1993 1 5 Opposition 1993 2004 1 6 Third government 2004 2009 1 7 2009 defeat 1 8 2011 government debt crisis 1 9 Fourth government with PASOK 2012 2015 1 10 In opposition 2015 2019 1 11 Fifth government 2019 present 2 Ideology 3 Electoral history 3 1 Hellenic Parliament elections 3 2 European Parliament elections 4 Party leaders 5 Symbols 5 1 Logos 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Foundation Edit Konstantinos Karamanlis founder of New Democracy New Democracy was founded on 4 October 1974 by Konstantinos Karamanlis in the beginning of the metapolitefsi era following the fall of the Greek military junta 9 Karamanlis who had already served as Prime Minister of Greece from 1955 to 1963 was sworn in as the first Prime Minister of the Third Hellenic Republic in a national unity government on 24 July 1974 until the first free elections of the new era He intended New Democracy to be a more modern and progressive political party than the right wing parties that ruled Greece before the 1967 Greek coup d etat including his own National Radical Union ERE The party s ideology was defined as radical liberalism a term defined as the prevalence of free market rules with the decisive intervention of the state in favour of social justice The party was formed out of dissident members the pre Junta Centre Union and National Radical Union both of former Monarchists and Venizelists First government 1974 1981 Edit In the 1974 legislative election New Democracy obtained a massive parliamentary majority of 220 seats with a record 54 37 of the vote a result attributed to the personal appeal of Karamanlis to the electorate Karamanlis was elected as Prime Minister and soon decided to hold a referendum on 8 December 1974 for the issue of the form of government with a large majority of 69 17 monarchy was eventually abolished in favour of a republic The next major issue for the New Democracy cabinet was the creation of the Constitution of Greece which entered into force in 1975 and established Greece as a parliamentary republic On 12 June 1975 Greece applied to join the European Communities of which it was already an associate member since 1961 while it had already been readmitted to the Council of Europe on 28 November 1974 In the 1977 election New Democracy won again a large parliamentary majority of 171 seats albeit with a reduced percentage of popular vote 41 84 Under Karamanlis Greece redefined its relations with NATO and tried to resolve the Cyprus dispute following the Turkish invasion of the island In 1979 the first conference of the party was held in Chalkidiki where its ideological principles defined under the term radical liberalism were unanimously approved as well as its statute and the operating regulations of its organizations 10 It was the first conference of any Greek political party whose delegates were elected by the members 10 Karamanlis vision concerning the accession of Greece into the European Communities despite the resolute opposition of the Panhellenic Socialist Movement PASOK and the Communist Party of Greece KKE 11 led to the signing of the Treaty of Accession on 28 May 1979 in Athens following the ratification of the act by the Hellenic Parliament on 28 June 1979 Greece became the tenth member state of the European Communities on 1 January 1981 Karamanlis was criticised by opposing parties for not holding a referendum 12 even though Greece s accession into the European Communities had been in the forefront of New Democracy s political platform under which the party had been elected to power 12 Meanwhile Karamanlis relinquished the premiership in 1980 and was elected as President of Greece by the parliament serving until 1985 Georgios Rallis was elected as the new leader of New Democracy and succeeded Karamanlis in premiership Opposition and Mitsotakis rise to power 1981 1989 Edit Under the leadership of Georgios Rallis New Democracy was defeated in the 1981 legislative elections by Andreas Papandreou s PASOK which ran on a left wing progressive platform and was placed in opposition for a first time with 35 87 share of the vote and 115 seats On the same day on 18 October 1981 New Democracy was also defeated in the first Greek election to the European Parliament In the following December the party s parliamentary group elected Evangelos Averoff former Minister for National Defence as president of New Democracy but he resigned in 1984 due to health problems On 1 September 1984 Konstantinos Mitsotakis succeeded him in the party s presidency and he managed to increase its percentage in the 1985 elections to 40 85 although it was defeated again and remained in opposition Second government 1989 1993 Edit Konstantinos Mitsotakis and Suleyman Demirel Prime Ministers of Greece and Turkey respectively in the 1992 World Economic Forum Mitsotakis led New Democracy to a clear win in the June 1989 legislative elections registering 44 28 of the vote but due to the modification of the electoral law by the outbound PASOK government New Democracy obtained only 145 seats which were not enough to form a government on its own The aftermath was the formation of a coalition government under Tzannis Tzannetakis consisted of New Democracy and Coalition of the Left and Progress Synaspismos with the latter also including at the time the Communist Party of Greece In the subsequent elections of November 1989 New Democracy took one more comfortable win increasing its share to 46 19 of the vote and 148 seats but under the same electoral law they were still short of forming a government and this led to a national unity government along with PASOK and Synaspismos under Xenophon Zolotas Eventually in the 1990 election Mitsotakis New Democracy defeated once again Papandreou s PASOK with a lead of 8 28 but this time the 46 89 of votes awarded them with 150 seats which allowed Mitsotakis to form a majority in the parliament with the support of Democratic Renewal s DIANA sole member of parliament and one more seat given by the Supreme Special Court after a mistake in seat calculation was detected After three consecutive wide wins with high vote percentages Mitsotakis became the 178th Prime Minister of Greece and the 7th Prime Minister of the 3rd Hellenic Republic though with a slim parliamentary majority of 152 seats due to the electoral law in force at the time In a turbulent international political environment following the 1989 Fall of Communism in Europe Mitsotakis government focused on cutting government spending the privatization of state enterprises the reformation of the public administration and the restoration of the original electoral system with the addition of an election threshold of 3 In foreign policy the priorities were the restoration of confidence among Greece s economic and political partners NATO and the United States Mitsotakis also supported a new dialogue with Turkey on the Cyprus dispute and a compromise over the Macedonia naming dispute the latter triggered an irritation among the MPs of New Democracy which led Antonis Samaras to leave it and form a new political party in June 1993 Political Spring one more withdrawal later from its parliamentary group resulted in New Democracy s loss of the majority in the parliament and the call of early elections Opposition 1993 2004 Edit In the 1993 elections New Democracy suffered an easy defeat with 39 30 of the vote something that led to Mitsotakis resignation and the election of Miltiadis Evert in the party s leadership In the early 1996 legislative election New Democracy was defeated again by Costas Simitis PASOK registering 38 12 but Evert obtained a re election as the party s leader in the same year However in the spring of 1997 a new conference took place in order to elect a new president among others Kostas Karamanlis nephew of the party s founder was elected the sixth president of New Democracy Under Karamanlis New Democracy experienced an evident increase in popularity but in the 2000 elections they lost by only 1 06 of the popular vote the smallest margin in modern Greek history registering 42 74 and obtaining 125 seats in the parliament By 2003 New Democracy was consistently leading Simitis PASOK in opinion polls in January 2004 Simitis resigned and announced elections for 7 March while George Papandreou succeeded him in PASOK s leadership Third government 2004 2009 Edit Despite speculation that Papandreou would succeed in restoring the party s fortunes in the 2004 election Karamanlis managed to take a clear win with 45 36 of the vote and 165 seats and New Democracy returned to power after eleven years in opposition scoring an all time record of 3 359 682 votes in the history of Greek elections The regions that consistently support New Democracy include the Peloponnese Central Macedonia and West Macedonia On the other hand the party is weak in Crete the Aegean Islands Attica and West Greece Kostas Karamanlis giving an interview at a 2008 EPP summit On 16 September 2007 Kostas Karamanlis won re election with a diminished majority in Parliament and stated Thank you for your trust You have spoken loud and clear and chosen the course the country will take in the next few years George Papandreou PASOK accepted defeat New Democracy party with 41 84 and opposition party PASOK had 38 1 13 2009 defeat Edit Political campaign of party New Democracy before the European Parliament election in Greece in 2009 Kiosk of New Democracy in Athens for the 2009 Greek legislative election On 2 September 2009 Karamanlis announced his intention to call an election although one was not required until September 2011 14 The parliament was dissolved on 9 September and the 2009 legislative election was held on 4 October New Democracy s share of the parliamentary vote dropped to 33 47 down by 8 37 and they won only 91 of 300 seats dropping by 61 since the last election 15 The rival PASOK soared to 43 92 up 5 82 and took 160 seats up 58 15 The 33 5 tally marked a historic low for the party since its founding in 1974 16 Karamanlis conceded defeat and stated that he would resign as a leader of New Democracy and would not stand as a candidate at the next party election 17 Two former Ministers for Foreign Affairs Dora Bakoyannis and Antonis Samaras as well as Thessaloniki Prefect Panagiotis Psomiadis were announced as candidates 18 with Samaras being the favorite to win 19 On 29 November 2009 Antonis Samaras was elected the new leader of New Democracy by the party base at the 2009 leadership election 20 Following early results showing Samaras in the lead his main rival Dora Bakoyannis conceded defeat and congratulated Samaras for his election 21 later she left New Democracy to found her own party Democratic Alliance Samaras himself had also left New Democracy in 1992 because of his hard stance on the Macedonia naming dispute and found his own party Political Spring he returned to New Democracy in 2004 22 2011 government debt crisis Edit New Democracy was in opposition during the first phase 2009 11 of the Greek government debt crisis which included the First bailout package agreed in May 2010 The party did not support the first EU IMF rescue package of May 2010 and the three related austerity packages of March 2010 May 2010 and June 2011 23 24 25 Further measures were agreed by prime minister George Papandreou with the EU and private banks and insurers on 27 October 2011 The aim was to complete negotiations by the end of the year and put in place a full Second bailout package to supplement the one agreed in May 2010 26 Samaras initially blasted the deal 27 In reality New Democracy had dismissed cross party agreement even before the deal was agreed 28 A few days later Papandreou announced a surprise referendum 29 During the frantic negotiations that followed Samaras offered to support the austerity package he had initially condemned if Papandreou resigned and an interim government be appointed to lead the country to elections early in the new year 30 The referendum was never held and Papandreou resigned in early November 2011 New Democracy supported the new national unity government headed by Lucas Papademos however the party s support for austerity appeared lukewarm at first 31 32 Prime Minister Antonis Samaras in 2012 Within a few days party officials spoke of renegotiating existing agreements with the EU and IMF 33 EU partners requested that Samaras sign a letter committing him to the terms of the rescue package in what was seen as an effort to keep the nationalist elements of his party happy Samaras argued that his word should be enough and that the demand for a written commitment was humiliating 34 Both Papademos and the EU insisted on a written commitment New Democracy repeated its call for new elections 35 Samaras was said to be infuriating European leaders by only partly backing the international reform programme 36 A meeting of Eurozone s Finance Ministers was postponed in February 2012 when it became apparent that not all the main political parties were willing to pledge to honour the conditions demanded in return for the rescue package a day later Samaras reversed course and wrote to the European Commission and IMF promising to implement the austerity measures if his party were to win a general election in April 37 German finance minister Wolfgang Schauble suggested postponing the election and setting up a small technocratic cabinet like Italy s to run Greece for the next two years 37 Fourth government with PASOK 2012 2015 Edit In May 2012 general election the New Democracy regained the largest party but could not obtain a majority Anti austerity leftist SYRIZA led by Alexis Tsipras became the second largest party and refused to negotiate with New Democracy and PASOK After the general election the New Democracy could not form a coalition government New Democracy during its rule introduced a strict immigration policy and proposed strengthening this policy as part of its political agenda 38 In opposition 2015 2019 Edit In its electoral campaign for the January 2015 legislative election Samaras promised to continue with his plan to exit the bailout and return to growth by further privatizations a corporate tax rate reduced to 15 percent and a recapitalization of Greece s banks 39 The party received a total of 747 214 of state funding the largest share of all political parties in Greece 40 In the election ND was defeated by SYRIZA On 5 July 2015 Samaras stepped down from party leadership 41 New Democracy was once again defeated by SYRIZA in the September 2015 legislative election but maintained its number of seats in the Hellenic Parliament On 10 January 2016 Kyriakos Mitsotakis was elected as new party leader 42 On 4 October 2018 the party adopted a new logo 43 Fifth government 2019 present Edit In the 2019 legislative election New Democracy won 158 seats in the 300 seat Hellenic Parliament a majority of the seats 44 enabling it to form a government on its own under Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis During the COVID 19 pandemic Mitsotakis efforts to deal with the prolonged lockdown in Greece received widespread praise from Greek and International press 45 46 47 analysts 48 and academics 49 for the well structured approach and continuous reliance on scientific expertise of the Greek pandemic task force headed by Sotiris Tsiodras 50 In 2021 the country managed to keep the new cases of COVID 19 to low levels by enforcing back to back strict lockdowns in Athens and Thessaloniki and enabling different emergency protocols for rural areas 51 At the same time the government focused on tackling the pandemic before the launch of the 2021 summer tourist season in an attempt to boost the country s economy 52 53 During Mitsotakis term as PM he has received praise for being pro European and governing technocratic 54 his handling of the COVID 19 pandemic 55 56 his handling of migration 57 and his handling of the Greek economy with Greece being named the Top Economic Performer for 2022 by the Economist 58 This was in particular due to Greece in 2022 being able to repay ahead of schedule 2 7 billion euros 2 87 billion of loans owed to euro zone countries under the first bailout it received during its decade long debt crisis 59 Although Mitsotakis has also received criticism as Greece has experienced a democratic backsliding and heightened corruption 60 with a deterioration of freedom of the press 61 62 63 and was marred by the Novartis corruption scandal 64 65 the 2022 wiretapping scandal 66 and the fatal 2023 Tempi train collision Ideology EditNew Democracy political position has been placed as centre right 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 The main ideologies of the party have been described as liberal conservative 3 4 5 or conservative liberal 75 Christian democratic 5 76 and with a pro European stance 77 Electoral history EditHellenic Parliament elections Edit Popular vote in Greek legislative elections Election Hellenic Parliament Rank Government LeaderVotes pp Seats won 1974 2 669 133 54 37 New 220 300 220 1 Government Konstantinos Karamanlis1977 2 146 365 41 84 12 53 171 300 49 1 Government1981 2 034 496 35 88 5 96 115 300 56 2 Opposition Georgios Rallis1985 2 599 681 40 85 4 97 126 300 11 2 Opposition Constantine MitsotakisJune 1989 2 887 488 44 28 3 43 145 300 19 1 Minority governmentthen caretakerNovember 1989 3 093 479 46 19 1 91 148 300 3 1 Caretaker government1990 3 088 137 46 89 0 70 150 300 2 1 Government1993 2 711 737 39 30 7 59 111 300 39 2 Opposition1996 2 586 089 38 12 1 18 108 300 3 2 Opposition Miltiadis Evert2000 2 935 196 42 74 4 62 125 300 17 2 Opposition Kostas Karamanlis2004 3 360 424 45 36 2 62 165 300 40 1 Government2007 2 994 979 41 87 3 49 152 300 13 1 Government2009 2 295 967 33 47 8 40 91 300 61 2 OppositionMay 2012 1 192 103 18 85 14 62 108 300 17 1 Caretaker government Antonis SamarasJune 2012 1 825 497 29 66 10 81 129 300 21 1 Coalition governmentJanuary 2015 1 718 694 27 81 1 85 76 300 53 2 OppositionSeptember 2015 1 526 205 28 09 0 28 75 300 1 2 Opposition Vangelis Meimarakis2019 2 251 411 39 85 11 76 158 300 83 1 Government Kyriakos MitsotakisEuropean Parliament elections Edit European ParliamentElection Votes pp Seats won Rank Leader1981 1 779 462 31 3 New 8 24 8 2 Georgios Rallis1984 2 266 568 38 1 6 8 9 24 1 2 Evangelos Averoff1989 2 647 215 40 5 2 4 10 24 1 1 Constantine Mitsotakis1994 2 133 372 32 7 7 8 9 25 1 2 Miltiadis Evert1999 2 314 371 36 0 3 3 9 25 0 1 Kostas Karamanlis2004A 2 633 961 43 0 4 7 11 24 2 12009 1 655 636 32 3 10 7 8 22 3 22014 1 298 713 22 7 9 6 5 21 3 2 Antonis Samaras2019 1 872 814 33 1 10 4 8 21 3 1 Kyriakos MitsotakisA 2004 results are compared to the combined totals for ND and POLAN totals in the 1999 election Party leaders Edit Leader Portrait Term of office Prime Minister1 Konstantinos Karamanlis 4 October 1974 8 May 1980 1974 19802 Georgios Rallis 8 May 1980 9 December 1981 1980 19813 Evangelos Averoff 9 December 1981 1 September 1984 4 Konstantinos Mitsotakis 1 September 1984 3 November 1993 Tzannetakis 1989 1990 19935 Miltiadis Evert 3 November 1993 21 March 1997 6 Kostas Karamanlis 21 March 1997 30 November 2009 2004 20097 Antonis Samaras 30 November 2009 5 July 2015 2012 2015 Vangelis Meimarakis interim 5 July 2015 25 November 2015 Ioannis Plakiotakis interim 25 November 2015 10 January 2016 8 Kyriakos Mitsotakis 78 10 January 2016 Incumbent 2019 presentSymbols EditThe traditional symbol of the party has been the freedom torch incorporated in its logo albeit in a stylized form in the logo adopted in 2018 Logos Edit Party logo 1978 2010 Party logo 2010 2018 Current logo since 2018References Edit a b Kostis Hatzidakis and Adonis Georgiadis appointed New Democracy VPs To Vima 18 January 2016 Ayta einai ta tragoydia ths ND O Anwnymos Onnediths toy Oyiliams kai ta entexna toy Xatzhkokolh thecaller gr 28 January 2018 Retrieved 25 September 2018 a b Jose M Magone 2003 The Politics of Southern Europe Integration into the European Union Praeger p 148 ISBN 978 0 275 97787 0 a b Derek W Urwin 2014 The Community of Europe A History of European Integration Since 1945 Routledge p 206 ISBN 978 1 317 89252 6 a b c Nordsieck Wolfram 2019 Greece Parties and Elections in Europe Retrieved 30 December 2020 Robert Thomson 2011 Resolving Controversy in the European Union Legislative Decision Making before and after Enlargement Cambridge University Press p 90 ISBN 978 1 139 50517 8 Parties Centrist Democrat International Archived from the original on 27 March 2012 Retrieved 6 June 2012 Member parties International Democrat Union Archived from the original on 1 July 2014 Retrieved 30 January 2015 Pappas T 16 July 2014 Populism and Crisis Politics in Greece Springer p 14 ISBN 978 1 137 41058 0 New Democracy ND a center right party founded by Karamanlis in October 1974 a b History New Democracy official website in Greek Retrieved 23 January 2015 The accession of Greece CVCE 11 September 2012 p 2 Retrieved 23 January 2015 a b Lauth Bacas Jutta 2004 Ethnologia Balkanica LIT Verlag p 8 Yahoo com Prime minister s party wins Greek vote Carassava Anthee 3 September 2009 Greek Premier Dogged by Many Troubles Takes Risk With Snap Elections The New York Times a b National elections October 2009 Ministry of the Interior Retrieved 28 March 2012 Becatoros Elena 4 October 2009 Socialists Trounce Conservatives in Greek Elections The Huffington Post Smith Helena 5 October 2009 Greek socialists achieve resounding win in snap election The Guardian ND heads for tense election showdown Kathimerini 28 November 2009 Archived from the original on 25 February 2012 Samaras keeps lead in ND race Kathimerini 23 November 2009 Archived from the original on 23 February 2012 Retrieved 28 March 2012 Ka8arh nikh Samara Clear victory of Samaras Ta Nea in Greek 30 November 2009 Samaras Nikhsame oloi Den yparxoyn htthmenoi Samaras We all won there are no losers Ta Nea in Greek 29 November 2009 Tagaris Karolina 4 November 2011 Greek opposition leader s U turn opens path to power Reuters Greek parliament approves bill with austerity measures despite protest Xinhua News Agency 6 March 2010 Archived from the original on 20 January 2011 Smith Helena 6 May 2010 Greece approves sweeping austerity measures The Guardian Donadio Rachel Kitsantonis Niki 30 June 2011 Greek Parliament Approves Implementation of Austerity Plan The New York Times Eurozone leaders bankers agree 50 pct haircut for Greece Ekathimerini 27 October 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Stocks up but ND blasts debt deal Ekathimerini 27 October 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Cross party support appears unlikely Ekathimerini 25 October 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Papandreou calls for referendum on EU debt deal Ekathimerini 31 October 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Samaras Our proposal is still on the table Ekathimerini 5 November 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Samaras gives limited support to transitional gov t Ekathimerini 14 November 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Greece s politicians In their own time The Economist 10 November 2011 Retrieved 9 March 2012 ND takes more offensive stance Ekathimerini 29 November 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Samaras ousts MP over far right comments Ekathimerini 14 November 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Greece s government Divided they stand The Economist 16 November 2011 Retrieved 9 March 2012 Charlemagne Angela the lawgiver The Economist 4 February 2012 Retrieved 9 March 2012 a b Greece and the euro From tragedy to farce The Economist 15 February 2012 Retrieved 9 March 2012 Nick Malkoutzis 30 March 2012 Is immigration a bigger issue for Greece than the economy Kathimerini Retrieved 15 May 2016 Elections 2015 Party Profiles 21 January 2015 Retrieved 25 January 2015 Elections 2015 Facts amp Figures 21 January 2015 Retrieved 25 January 2015 Pappas Gregory 5 July 2015 Greek Opposition Leader Antonis Samaras Resigns as New Democracy Head The Pappas Post Retrieved 14 February 2019 Kyriakos Mitsotakis elected as leader of Greek centre right party The Guardian Reuters 10 January 2016 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 14 February 2019 Kampouris Nick 4 October 2018 Greece s New Democracy Marks 44th Anniversary Launching New Logo GreekReporter com Retrieved 14 February 2019 Mitsotakis sworn in as Greek prime minister after resounding win The Scotsman 8 July 2019 Greek PM rides high in opinion polls after one year in office Al Jazeera Retrieved 25 April 2021 Coronavirus Greece and Croatia acted fast now need to save summer BBC News 4 May 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Commentary How Greece can reopen without ruining its coronavirus containment success Fortune Retrieved 25 April 2021 Says 陈伟明 21 April 2020 Greece in the Time of COVID 19 a chance to defend European ideals Greece LSE Retrieved 25 April 2021 Moris Dimitrios Schizas Dimitrios 2020 Lockdown During COVID 19 The Greek Success In Vivo 34 3 suppl 1695 1699 doi 10 21873 invivo 11963 ISSN 0258 851X PMC 8378029 PMID 32503831 How Greece is beating coronavirus despite a decade of debt The Guardian 14 April 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Politis Ioannis Georgiadis Georgios Nikolaidou Anastasia Kopsacheilis Aristomenis Fyrogenis Ioannis Sdoukopoulos Alexandros Verani Eleni Papadopoulos Efthymis December 2021 Mapping travel behavior changes during the COVID 19 lock down a socioeconomic analysis in Greece European Transport Research Review 13 1 21 doi 10 1186 s12544 021 00481 7 ISSN 1867 0717 PMC 7968570 Greece Will Ease Main Lockdown Measures in Early May Bloomberg com 21 April 2021 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Greece hopes to open to tourists from 14 May The Guardian 9 March 2021 Retrieved 25 April 2021 How Greece became Europe s unlikely model student The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 21 December 2022 Charlemagne How Greece became Europe s unlikely model student The Economist 22 May 2021 Retrieved 21 May 2021 Seinti Eva 26 February 2021 Ellada pws ginetai o emboliasmos xwris xaos Nea epainetika sxolia apo ta germanika MME CNN Greece in Greek Athens Retrieved 21 May 2021 Migration EU praises Greece as shield after Turkey opens border the Guardian 3 March 2020 Retrieved 21 December 2022 Kokkinidis Tasos 21 December 2022 Greece Named Top Economic Performer for 2022 by the Economist GreekReporter com Retrieved 21 December 2022 Greece repays euro zone bailout loans early for first time source Reuters 15 December 2022 Retrieved 21 December 2022 The Rot at the Heart of Greece Is Now Clear for Everyone to See New York Times 22 August 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 How Greece became Europe s worst place for press freedom Politico 8 August 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Greece Media freedom under assault AlJazeera 23 April 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 The worrying decline of press freedom in Greece Le Monde 15 May 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Greek Prosecution of Novartis Reporters an Attempt to Terrorize Journalists BIRN 21 February 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 The unethical perpetrator Documento 10 July 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Greek Watergate tarnishes reputation of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis Le Monde 30 August 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Pappas Takis S Dinas Elias 1 December 2006 From Opposition to Power Greek Conservatism Reinvented South European Society and Politics 11 3 4 477 495 doi 10 1080 13608740600856520 ISSN 1360 8746 S2CID 154267629 Thomson Robert 15 September 2011 Resolving Controversy in the European Union Legislative Decision Making before and after Enlargement Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 50517 8 Bailey David Waele Jean Michel De Escalona Fabien Vieira Mathieu 19 November 2014 European Social Democracy During the Global Economic Crisis Renovation Or Resignation Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 9195 7 Hutter Swen Kriesi Hanspeter 27 June 2019 European Party Politics in Times of Crisis Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 48379 7 Montgomery Molly 9 July 2019 The center right ousts leftists in Greece Brookings Retrieved 19 January 2022 Greek elections landslide victory for centre right New Democracy party the Guardian 7 July 2019 Retrieved 19 January 2022 Greece elections Centre right regains power under Kyriakos Mitsotakis BBC News 8 July 2019 Retrieved 19 January 2022 Greek Centre Right Party Wins Landslide Election Victory Balkan Insight 8 July 2019 Retrieved 19 January 2022 Jorg Arnold 2006 Criminal Law as a Reaction to System Crime Policy for Dealing with the Past in European Transitions In Jerzy W Borejsza Klaus Ziemer eds Totalitarian and Authoritarian Regimes in Europe Legacies and Lessons from the Twentieth Century Berghahn Books p 410 ISBN 1 57181 641 0 Lawrence Ezrow 2011 Electoral systems and party responsiveness In Norman Schofield Gonzalo Caballero eds Political Economy of Institutions Democracy and Voting Springer Science amp Business Media p 320 ISBN 978 3 642 19519 8 Greece Europe Elects Retrieved 19 January 2022 Kyriakos Mitsotakis elected as leader of Greek centre right party The Guardian Athens Reuters 10 January 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to New Democracy Greece Official website in Greek ND list of MPs Vouliwatch gr Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New Democracy Greece amp oldid 1147371272, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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