Search
-
ND struggles to shift spotlight away from wiretapping fallout
PoliticsGreek Politicsthat everything happen out in the open and that any discussion about his case should take place in Parliament
11% -
Scepticism greets govt denials of involvement in surveillance, as communications missteps snowball
PoliticsGreek Politicsspokesman’s statements on the phone-tapping affair are greeted with increasingly open scepticism
11% -
Parties tussle over scope of surveillance probe as latest poll puts Mitsotakis in frame
PoliticsGreek Politicsdissenting voices are emerging from within the governing party. Speaking on Open TV, the MP Theodoros
11% -
Inquiry into surveillance scandal begins as ND feeds speculation about change to election law
PoliticsGreek Politicsto the electoral law is open to question, particularly because of the reputational risk that this would entail
11% -
Opposition anger at constrained surveillance inquiry not yet reflected in public mood
PoliticsGreek Politicsfor Ethnos newspaper and Open TV may have provided the explanation for why the government appears so
11% -
Cost-of-living, surveillance developments encourage ND to target majority in 2023
PoliticsGreek Politicsthough the document lacked the necessary signatures from EYP officials. Speaking on Open TV on Monday
11% -
Migration back on main political agenda
PoliticsGreek Politicstheir predecessors. In his comments on Thursday, Mitarachi spoke of Greece adopting an “open border” policy
11% -
Turkey's new Libya MoU prompts swift reaction from Athens, which mulls further moves
PoliticsForeign Policyis assessing is keeping an open mind about what other actions Ankara may engage in to challenge Greece
11% -
Tsipras calls for more state intervention in energy sector as hopes for EU solution dwindle
PoliticsGreek Politicsfor electricity generation on the grounds that it could drive up consumption, though it leaves open
11% -
Speculation over polls heats up as parties battle over cost-of-living measures
PoliticsGreek Politicswas open to calling elections in the spring, several weeks before the expiry of New Democracy’s term
11%