Simple for the parliamentary elections in the country of the European Union.
Millions of Greeks cast their ballots for general elections.
Here’s everything you need to know.
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- Polling stations opened at 07:00 local time (04:00 GMT) and closed at 19:00 (16:00 GMT).
- A joint exit poll conducted by six polling stations will be published once voting has concluded.
- A first estimate of the number of votes is expected around 8.30pm (5.30pm GMT).
- The main issues affecting voters are the economy, jobs and security with neighboring Turkey.
- Parties must reach the 3 percent threshold to gain access to the 300-seat parliament.
- New Democracy, a centre-right party led by Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, scores 31-38 percent.
- It is followed by Syriza, the main left-wing opposition party led by Alexis Tsipras, trailing by 4-7 percentage points.
- The election is unlikely to produce an outright winner after a change in the country’s electoral system.
- A new vote is expected in early July, unless the political parties agree on a coalition. This is generally considered unlikely.
- According to polls, the country is in fairly strong economic health, with falling unemployment and growth this year expected to be twice that of the European Union.
- But economic issues remain front and center amid a biting cost-of-living crisis.
- Mitsotakis, 55, has called on voters not to throw away hard-won economic stability.
- But Tsipras, 48, accuses New Democracy of practicing trickle-down economics – only driving growth, but not managing the distribution of wealth.
- Should no party win outright, Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou will give the leader of the largest party a three-day mandate to form a coalition.
- If this is not possible, the exploratory assignment is transferred to the second party and then to the third party. If the parties fail to agree, the president holds a final meeting with party leaders to form a government or an interim government that calls elections. When they still cannot agree, she appoints a caretaker government to call new elections. A senior judicial official, who is supposed to head one of Greece’s three largest courts, has been named acting prime minister, according to new polls.
- Crucially, in those elections, the system reverts to semi-proportional representation, with a sliding scale for seat bonuses, increasing the likelihood of a party winning outright.
- Under that semi-proportional system, the winning party gets a bonus of 20 seats if it gets at least 25 percent of the vote, and can get up to 50 seats if it gets about 40 percent of the vote.