Search
-
Newsletter 163 -25/05/2018
of Greece’s post-MoU growth strategy, which was presented to the cabinet by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
3% -
An uncertain and wasted year for Italy
AgoraPM-designate Carlo Cottarelli is expected to submit his cabinet composition to President Sergio Mattarella on Tuesday, May 29. Within ten days from the oath-taking ceremony, the new government will have to go before both houses of parliament to secure a confidence vote. Regardless of the high
3% -
SYRIZA prepares for final bailout vote, seeks to highlight benefits
PoliticsGreek PoliticsMinister Euclid Tsakalotos and other cabinet members ahead of the multi-bill related
3% -
Parties draw dividing lines ahead of new protests over name issue
PoliticsGreek Politicsare going in. Speaking to his shadow cabinet on Tuesday, Mitsotakis suggested that the coalition wants
3% -
New Democracy gains MP as new effort to launch nationalist party announced
PoliticsGreek Politicsof those MPs, Dimitris Kammenos, announced on Tuesday that along with Takis Baltakos, the former cabinet
3% -
Fire fallout casts doubt on Tsipras’s post-MoU strategy
PoliticsGreek Politicsof the Mati disaster will still be fresh. It has been rumoured that Tsipras may conduct a cabinet
3% -
Soldiers' return from Turkey provides Tsipras with timely boost
PoliticsGreek Politicsto generate a revival in its fortunes. A cabinet reshuffle is likely to follow before the end
3% -
Reshuffle on backburner as Tsipras draws ideological battle lines
PoliticsGreek PoliticsThe timing of the cabinet reshuffle that has been trailed in the media, and by some government officials, over the last few weeks looks set to change following Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s address from Ithaca on Tuesday. It had been expected that the ministerial changes would be announced
3% -
SYRIZA elects new secretary as Tsipras sets stage for election contest
PoliticsGreek Politicsto conduct a cabinet reshuffle in the coming hours or days. The minister was elected with 126 votes from
3% -
Athens eyes cancellation of pension cuts as Tsipras prepares Thessaloniki package
EconomyProgrammeThe Greek government has given its clearest indication yet that it does not intend to implement the 1 percent of GDP in pension cuts due next year. Ahead of the first meeting of Alexis Tsipras’s new cabinet, two senior coalition figures have suggested that the measure, agreed with the lenders
3%