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  1. Lenders put together proposal that may leave Tsipras struggling

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    be asked to give its view on the proposal as early as Wednesday, when the Euro Working Group is due

    3%
  2. Newsletter 29 - 05/06/2015

    Newsletters

    , it made, in my view, two key strategic mistakes that subsequently misinformed their negotiations

    3%
  3. Greek negotiations: A marathon that has yet to run its course

    Agora

    in January, it made, in my view, two key strategic mistakes that subsequently misinformed

    3%
  4. S&P moves Greece down a notch to CCC, maintains recession forecast

    Economy

    its scheduled payment to the IMF that was due on June 5. The downgrade reflects S&P view

    3%
  5. Greece deal hangs in balance as IMF sees major differences
    Photo via IMF photostream on Flickr [https://www.flickr.com/photos/imfphoto/]

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    reiterated the fund’s view for social fairness and equally balanced contribution, yet stressed

    3%
  6. Greek coalition braces for internal debate over agreement with lenders
    Photo by MacroPolis

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    will not necessarily be the prevailing view within the party. That is not to say Tsipras will have an easy

    3%
  7. The political scenarios ahead for Greece after the referendum

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    but would view it as a tool to negotiate for a better deal. This possibility seems utterly unrealistic

    3%
  8. Greek government's proposals to bridge gap with lenders appear to fall short

    EconomyProgramme

    the EC is assessing the Greek government proposals and will present its view in the Eurogroup

    3%
  9. What the ECB's latest decision on ELA and collateral haircuts means for Greek banks
    Photo by MacroPolis

    Economy

    government to resume negotiations with the institutions in view of a credible process for a new bailout

    3%
  10. Who voted "No" in Sunday's referendum?

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    that are “not at all proud to be Greek”. From a political point of view, the ‘No’ vote clearly prevailed

    3%