Search
-
Newsletter 488 - 12/12/2025
developments have left Mitsotakis facing a multifaceted crisis: mounting rural anger, internal dissent
4% -
Government suffers as farmers vow to continue protests
PoliticsGreek Politicsto intensify their protests and reject dialogue with the government for now. Anger over an error
4% -
PM tries to isolate protesting farmers, dismisses talk of reshuffle
PoliticsGreek Politicschains disrupted. Speaking to Action24 TV, Mitsotakis acknowledged the anger but argued
4% -
Farmers and government edge towards dialogue after weeks of escalation
PoliticsGreek Politicsthe farmers’ anger at rising production costs and what they see as inadequate government support. The protests
4% -
Farmers’ boycott scuppers PM meeting as Karystianou fleshes out political vision
PoliticsGreek Politicsto attend reflects both tactical calculation and genuine anger. Hardline groups believe that boycotting
4% -
Athens walks tightrope as Trump rattles transatlantic ties
PoliticsForeign PolicyAleksandr Lukashenko, raising further questions about legitimacy. A rejection would anger Trump
4% -
Newsletter 494 - 13/02/2026
, Mitsotakis has been grappling with a more combustible problem: the simmering anger of farmers
4% -
Ministerial resignation adds to pressure on PM as Tsipras prepares for return to arena
PoliticsGreek Politicsinternal anger before Wednesday’s crucial vote on the immunity of ND MPs named in the OPEKEPE case
4% -
Karystianou’s party makes political debut as confrontation over scandals continues
PoliticsGreek PoliticsMaria Karystianou’s new political movement was launched in Thessaloniki on Thursday evening in what was far more than a conventional party unveiling. It marked the transformation of a social trauma into a political project, and the shift from collective grief and anger over the Tempe rail disaster
4% -
EPPO raises stakes over judicial independence question as new political entrants build cases
PoliticsGreek Politicsparty are all seeking to capture different forms of anger and disillusionment with the status quo
4%