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Former Greek premier expelled from ruling party

Antonis Samaras strongly disapproved of government policy that he considered too ‘centrist’ or ‘woke’.

By contributor By Demetris Nellas, Associated Press
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Former Greek prime minister Antonis Samaras giving a speech
Former Greek prime minister Antonis Samaras (Thanassis Stavrakis/AP)

Former Greek prime minister Antonis Samaras has been expelled from the ruling New Democracy party over his persistent criticism of government policies.

Mr Samaras, 73, a hard-line nationalist, has criticised Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’s approach to negotiations with Turkey, which he has likened to appeasement.

He also strongly disapproved of government policy that he considered too “centrist” or “woke”, especially the decision to legislate in favour of same-sex marriage earlier this year.

The government appeared particularly irked by a Samaras interview to be published in Sunday newspaper To Vima in which he called for the ousting of foreign minister George Gerapetritis over his conduct of negotiations with Turkey.

“Mr Samaras … did not just express opinions. He expressed his complete disagreement with all governing policies. Moreover, he adopted extreme lies (about the foreign minister) in an unbecoming and provocative manner,” said government spokesman Pavlos Marinakis in announcing Mr Samaras’s expulsion on Saturday.

Mr Samaras responded in a lengthy statement, saying: “Arrogance and loss of nerve explain Mitsotakis’s move. Cut off from the party base, he is leading a party that scarcely resembles New Democracy.”

It is not the first time that Mr Samaras has clashed with a Mitsotakis. In 1992, then-prime minister Constantine Mitsotakis, father of the current premier, dismissed Mr Samaras as foreign minister over policy differences regarding the name dispute with what was then the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, the present North Macedonia.

In 1993, Mr Samaras and a few like-minded politicians left New Democracy, bringing down the Mitsotakis government and ushering in more than 10 years of socialist rule. Mr Samaras founded his own short-lived party, Political Spring.

Mr Samaras succeeded former prime minister Costas Karamanlis as head of the conservatives in 2009, but left the post after an electoral defeat in 2015.

“This time, history will not repeat itself. The government majority continues its course, without Mr Samaras,” said the government spokesman.

“No one has the right to mess with the country’s stability in these troubled times,” said Mr Marinakis.

The ruling conservatives have a slight majority in Parliament, with 155 politicians out of 300. But Mr Samaras has a number of supporters among that group, as does the now retired Mr Karamanlis.

In the interview, Mr Samaras proposed Mr Karamanlis should replace President Katerina Sakellaropoulou, a left-of-centre former judge whose five-year term ends in early 2025. She had been elected by Parliament with Mr Mitsotakis’s backing.

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