PASOK explained

Panhellenic Socialist Movement
Native Name:Greek, Modern (1453-);: Πανελλήνιο Σοσιαλιστικό Κίνημα
Native Name Lang:el
Abbreviation:PASOK, ΠΑΣΟΚ
President:Nikos Androulakis
Founder:Andreas Papandreou
Position:Centre-left[1]
Slogan:"Society in the foreground"
Student Wing:Panhellenic Combative Student Faction (ΠΑΣΠ)
Panhellenic Combative Student Movement (ΠΑΜΚ)
Youth Wing:PASOK Youth
Membership Year:2022
Membership:189,000[2]
Headquarters:Chariláou Trikoúpi 50,
106 80 Athens
Europarl:Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Anthem:O ílios o prásinos (The Green Sun)[3]
Flag:Flag of PASOK (Panhellenic Socialist Movement).png
Seats1 Title:Parliament
Seats2 Title:European Parliament
Country:Greece
Wing1:Panhellenic Trade Union Movement of Workers (ΠΑΣΚΕ)
Wing1 Title:Trade union wing

The Panhellenic Socialist Movement (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Πανελλήνιο Σοσιαλιστικό Κίνημα|Panellínio Sosialistikó Kínima, in Greek, Modern (1453-); pronounced as /paneˈlini.o sosi.alistiˈko ˈcinima/), known mostly by its acronym PASOK, (; Greek, Modern (1453-);: ΠΑΣΟΚ, in Greek, Modern (1453-); pronounced as /paˈsok/) is a social-democratic[4] political party in Greece. Until 2012 it was one of the two major parties in the country, along with New Democracy, its main political rival. In the June 2023 Greek legislative electionit once again held firm on to its position of one of the ”big three” political parties of Greece.

Following the collapse of the Greek military dictatorship of 1967–1974, PASOK was founded on 3 September 1974 as a socialist party.

Formerly the largest left-of-center party in Greece between 1977 and 2012, PASOK lost much of its popular support as a result of the Greek debt crisis. PASOK was the ruling party when the economic crisis began, and it negotiated the first Greek bailout package with the European troika, which necessitated harsh austerity measures.[5] [6] This caused a significant loss in the party's popularity.[7] [8] It was part of two coalition governments from 2011 to 2015, during which further austerity measures were taken in response to the crisis. Due to these measures and the crisis, PASOK went from being the largest party in the Hellenic Parliament with 160 seats (43.92% of the popular vote) in the 2009 election to being the smallest party with 13 seats (4.68% of the popular vote) in the January 2015 election. This decline became known as Pasokification.[9]

To halt the party's decline, Fofi Gennimata was elected as the new president of the party and formed a political alliance known as the Democratic Alignment (DISY). In the September 2015 election, DISY was the fourth most voted-for party. In 2018, PASOK merged into a new political alliance of centre-left parties, again led by Gennimata, called the Movement for Change (KINAL), becoming the third largest party in the parliament in the 2019 election.

History

Foundation

The first members of the party were the main organizers of the collapse of the Greek junta and the re-establishment of democracy on 3 September 1974. Its founder was Andreas Papandreou, son of the late Greek liberal leader and three-time Prime Minister of Greece Georgios Papandreou Sr, and its co-founder trade unionist Georgios Daskalakis. Its founding mottos were "National Independence, Popular Sovereignty, Social Emancipation, Democratic Process." Andreas Papandreou was offered the leadership of the liberal political forces - what evolved into Centre Union – New Forces - immediately after the restoration of democracy, but in a risky move he declined, so the leadership was assumed by Georgios Mavros. Papandreou, a powerful orator and charismatic leader, explicitly rejected the Venizelist ideological heritage of his father, and stressed the fact that he was a socialist, not a liberal.

Early years

At the November 1974 elections the Party received only 13.5% of the vote and won 15 seats (out of 300), coming third behind the centre-right New Democracy of Konstantinos Karamanlis and the Centre Union – New Forces (EK-ND) of Giorgos Mavros. In the November 1977 elections, however, PASOK eclipsed the EK-ND, winning 93 seats by doubling its share of the vote and becoming the main opposition party in Greece at the time.

In government

In the October 1981 national elections PASOK won a landslide victory with 48.1% of the vote, capturing 172 seats; it forming the first socialist government in Greece since 1924. Although Papandreou had campaigned for withdrawal of Greece from NATO and the European Economic Community, after a strong request by the rest of the party members and its supporters, changed his policies towards both organizations. He proved to be an excellent negotiator when it came to securing benefits and subsidies for Greece from the EEC. For example, in 1985 he openly threatened Jacques Delors to veto the entry of Spain and Portugal in to the ECC to secure more monetary aid for Greece.[10]

In 1986, the PASOK government amended the Greek constitution to remove most powers from the President and giving wider authority to the Prime Minister and the Executive Government. Civil marriages, not consecrated by religious ceremony, were recognized as equally valid with religious weddings. The left-wing Resistance movement against the Axis in World War II was finally formally recognized, and former leftist resistance fighters were given state pensions, while leftist political refugees of the Greek Civil War were finally given permission to return to Greece. The National Health System was created and various repressive laws of the anti-communist postwar establishment were abolished, wages were boosted, an independent and multidimensional foreign policy was pursued, many reforms in family law to strengthen the rights of women were undertaken and the Greek Gendarmerie military police force abolished in 1984.[11] In the June 1985 elections, PASOK received 46% of the vote, winning 161 seats, thus securing a stable parliamentary majority for its second term in power.

It continued to be popular for much of its second term, especially in March 1987 when Andreas Papandreou successfully handled a crisis in the Aegean with Turkey. By late 1988 however, both the government's popularity and Papandreou's health had declined. The former, because of the press’ reports of financial and corruption scandals that, implicated Ministers and, allegedly, Andreas Papandreou himself as well as because of fiscal austerity measures imposed after the Keynesian policies of the first term. PASOK lost the June 1989 elections with 40% of the vote while the opposing New Democracy received 44.3%. PASOK had changed the electoral law before the elections, making it harder for the leading party to form a majority government, so the legislature was deadlocked.

Another election in November produced a very similar result. After a brief period of a grand coalition government, in which PASOK participated, a third election in April 1990 brought New Democracy back to power. Despite a 7% lead in popular vote over PASOK, New Democracy could only secure a marginal majority in the Hellenic Parliament, electing 152 MPs out of a total of 300; PASOK had secured a larger number of representatives on a lower percentage of votes, as well as having a small overall lead, in the elections of 1985, under the previous electoral system. Its representation in the Parliament shrunk to 121 MPs in 1990.

In opposition, PASOK underwent a leadership crisis when Andreas Papandreou was prosecuted over his supposed involvement in the Bank of Crete scandal. He was eventually acquitted and, in a dramatic twist of fate, in the October 1993 elections led the party to another landslide victory. Papandreou returned to office with 47% of the vote and his re-election was considered by many a vote of confidence of the public against his prosecution. In November 1995, however, Papandreou's health began to deteriorate and the party was racked with leadership conflicts.

Modernization period

In January 1996 Andreas Papandreou retired after a protracted three-month-long hospitalization, during which he retained the role of Prime Minister; he died six months later. He was succeeded by Costas Simitis, the candidate of the modernising, pro-European wing of PASOK (the so-called "modernizers", εκσυγχρονιστές eksynchronistes), who won an internal vote against Akis Tsochatzopoulos, a Papandreou confidant. In the first days following his election, Costas Simitis faced the biggest crisis in Greek politics for over 20 years, with the Imia crisis. He was criticized for his soft stance against Turkey and especially for praising in public the American intervention on the issue.

In a PASOK conference held in the summer of 1996, following Andreas Papandreou's death, Costas Simitis was elected leader of the party and called early elections seeking a renewed public vote of confidence. Although the Imia crisis had somewhat tarnished his image, the country's economic prosperity and his matter-of-fact administration won him the September 1996 general election with a 41.5% of the vote. Under Costas Simitis' leadership, PASOK had two major successes: In September 1997 Greece won the right to stage the 2004 Summer Olympic Games and in 2001 it was confirmed that the country would be included in the Eurozone, for which it had failed to meet the convergence criteria in 1998. Costas Simitis won another term in April 2000, narrowly winning with 43.8% of the vote and 158 seats: a substantial achievement for a Party which had been in power almost continuously for nearly 20 years.

In 2000, after the assassination of Brigadier Saunders by the terrorist group 17 November (17N), and especially with the forthcoming Athens Olympics being a major terrorist target, a significant international pressure was exerted on PASOK to recognise that Greece had a terrorist problem and do everything possible to bring the terrorist group to justice. Some among the western media had even falsely accusing the party of colluding with the terrorists, due to the fact that the authorities were unable to arrest the terrorists. Under the guidance of British and U.S. experts, the government intensified its efforts and finally, with a string of events starting at 29 June 2002, the 17N members were captured and put to trial.

Under the leadership of George Papandreou

Nevertheless, the party was losing its traditional appeal to the Greek lower and middle classes. To revitalize the party's chances for the next elections, Costas Simitis announced his resignation as the leader of the party on 7 January 2004. He was succeeded by George Papandreou, son of Andreas Papandreou. The party members were expecting that Papandreou could reverse the slide in the opinion polls which saw the opposition New Democracy (ND), under Kostas Karamanlis, 7% ahead at the start of the year.

Although Papandreou reduced ND's lead in the polls to 3%, he was unable to reverse the view of the majority of Greek voters that PASOK had been in power too long and had grown lazy, corrupt and had abandoned the inclusive and progressive principles of economic parity on which it was founded. ND had a comfortable win at the 2004 legislative elections held on 7 March 2004, placing the party in opposition after eleven years in office with 40.55% share of the vote and 117 seats.

On 16 September 2007, New Democracy headed by Costas Karamanlis won re-election with a marginal majority of 152 seats in the Parliament. Despite ND's falling performance in the 2007 legislative election, PASOK suffered a crushing defeat, registering 38.1% of the vote, its lowest percentage in almost 30 years, and 102 seats in the Hellenic Parliament.

The dismal result led to activation of the procedure to select a new leadership, or to reaffirm the current one. The main candidates for the leadership were the incumbent George Papandreou and the Party's informal second in command, Evangelos Venizelos. M.P. for Thessaloniki. M.P. Kostas Skandalidis also announced his candidacy in September. According to Party regulation, leaders are elected in a voting process open to all members. During the leadership election of 11 November 2007 George Papandreou was re-elected by the friends and members of the party as its leader.

In June 2009, the PASOK won the 2009 European Parliament election in Greece.[12] [13] Four months later, the Party enjoyed a resounding victory in the October 2009 general elections with 43.92% of the popular vote to ND's 33.48%, and 160 parliament seats to 91.[14] Due to a number of defections and expulsions after 2009, by November 2011 PASOK held a slim majority of 152 of the parliament's 300 seats.[15]

Decline (2009–2015)

A poll in October 2011 on behalf of the Greek TV channel Skai TV and the newspaper Kathimerini (after the austerity measures that were taken to tackle the financial crisis) revealed that of the people asked, 92% felt disappointed by the government while only 5% believed that a PASOK government would be best for the nation in the next elections.[7] In the same survey, when asked about whether people have a positive or negative opinion of the various political parties in Greece, PASOK scored as the lowest, with 76% answering "negative".[7]

Because of the financial crisis and the measures that were taken by the party from 2009 to 2012, PASOK, having been the largest party in the outgoing coalition government, achieved only third place with a mere 13.18%, retaining just 41 seats.[16]

After the elections of 6 May 2012, the President of Greece, Karolos Papoulias, mandated New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras to form a coalition government. On 7 May 2012, Samaras gave up the attempt and on the following day, President Papoulias mandated Alexis Tsipras, president of the Synaspismos political party and head of the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA) parliamentary group. After Tsipras was also unable to form a government, Evangelos Venizelos was mandated, but he too had no success. The legislative elections of June 2012 resulted in a further reduction in PASOK's popular support, probably as a result of the unpopular memorandum signed by former Prime Minister George Papandreou with the IMF, European Commission and European Central Bank. PASOK's share of the overall vote was its worst ever showing since the party was formed (12.28%). However PASOK decided to help the formation of a government by joining with New Democracy (ND) as well as the Democratic Left (DIMAR) of Fotis Kouvelis in a coalition under Prime Minister Samaras.

To contest the 2014 European election, PASOK founded the Olive Tree electoral alliance on 7 March 2014.[17] [18] [19] In the May 2014 European elections, the Olive Tree list came in fourth place nationally, receiving 8.02% of the vote, electing 2 MEPs.[20] [21]

On 29 December 2014, following the failure of the government to elect a presidential candidate, a snap January 2015 legislative election was called by Prime Minister Samaras, scheduled for 25 January 2015.[22] [23]

2015 legislative elections

On 2 January 2015, in the run-up to the legislative election, former Prime Minister and PASOK leader George Papandreou announced the formation of a breakaway party called Movement of Democratic Socialists (KIDISO),[24] [25] [26] a move immediately condemned by PASOK officials.[27] [28] Five PASOK members of the Hellenic Parliament were expected to join the new party, including the former ministers Philippos Sachinidis and Dimitris Reppas.[29]

In the 25 January 2015 legislative election, PASOK received 4.7% of the vote, with mandate for 13 seats in the Hellenic Parliament.[30]

On 30 August 2015, ahead of the upcoming September snap election, PASOK announced an electoral alliance with DIMAR, dubbed the Democratic Alignment (DISY).[31] [32] [33]

In the September 2015 legislative election on 20 September 2015, the Democratic Alignment (DISY) received 6.3% of the vote, and 17 seats.[34]

Under KINAL (2017–2021)

See main article: 2017 Greek centre-left leadership election. On 12 November 2017, an open primary was used as the first round of elections to select the leader of a new, as yet unfounded centre-left party in which PASOK would be folded. Nine initial leadership candidates include PASOK leader Fofi Gennimata, The River leader Stavros Theodorakis and incumbent Athens mayor Giorgos Kaminis.[35] [36] Reaching the second-round election were Gennimata, with 44.5% of the vote, and PASOK MEP Nikos Androulakis with 25.4%.[37] [38] The run-off election on 19 November was won by Gennimata with 56% of the vote.[39] [40] On 28 November 2017, the name of the new party was announced as "Movement for Change" (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Κίνημα Αλλαγής), abbreviated to KINAL (ΚΙΝΑΛ).[41] [42]

On 2 July 2018, The River left KINAL.[43] On 20 January 2019, DIMAR also left KINAL due to its position of supporting the Prespa agreement.[44] On 1 June 2019 former PASOK leader Evangelos Venizelos left KINAL, accusing Gennimata of turning the Movement into "SYRIZA's tail".[45]

KINAL increased its obtained seats in the 2019 Greek legislative election compared to Democratic Alignment, becoming Greece's third-largest party or coalition and securing 22 seats in the Hellenic Parliament.[46] Following the election, KINAL positioned itself into opposition to the new Mitsotakis Government.[47]

Gennimata died on 25 October 2021 at the Evangelismos Hospital in Athens from cancer.[48]

Elections for the new leader took place in December 2021, with the main candidates being Andreas Loverdos, Nikos Androulakis, and George Papandreou. Nikos Androulakis was elected to the leadership of both KINAL and PASOK on 12 December 2021.[49]

Return of PASOK

On 9 May 2022, the alliance was rebranded back to "PASOK – Movement for Change" (PASOK–KINAL) after an internal party referendum, becoming a political party in its own right and absorbing the original party incarnation.[50] The old PASOK emblem (the green sun) was restored soon after that.[51]

At the May 2023 election, PASOK–KINAL managed to increase both its vote percentage by 3.36% and its share of seats in the Hellenic Parliament from 22 to 41.[52] This increase, in combination with the electoral decline of Syriza,[53] has raised hopes among members that the party will regain its former status as the largest opposition party.[54]

At the 2024 European Parliament election, even though the party managed to come first in Lasithi and Heraklion, it failed to capitalize enough on Syriza's decline to become opposition; in fact the party stagnated enough for many members like Haris Doukas and Pavlos Geroulanos to call for an election to replace Nikos Androulakis, the first round of the PASOK party election is planned to take place on 6 October 2024 while the second round is said to take place on 13.[55] [56] [57]

International and European links

PASOK is a member of the Socialist International,[58] the Progressive Alliance[59] and the Party of European Socialists.[60] PASOK MEPs sit with the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) group in the European Parliament.

Pasokification refers to the decline and rightward political shift of centre-left parties across Europe.

Election results

Hellenic Parliament

ElectionHellenic ParliamentRankGovernmentLeader
Votes%±ppSeats won+/−
1974666,41313.58%New 123rdAndreas Papandreou
19771,300,02525.34%+11.76 812nd
19812,726,30948.07%+22.73 791st
19852,916,73545.82%−2.25 111st
Jun 19892,551,51839.13%−6.69 362nd
Nov 19892,724,33440.67%+1.54 32nd
19902,543,04238.61%−2.06 52nd
19933,235,01746.88%+8.27 471st
19962,814,77941.49%−5.39 81stCostas Simitis
20003,007,59643.79%+2.40 31st
20043,003,98840.55%−3.34 412ndGeorge Papandreou
20072,727,27938.10%−2.45 152nd
20093,012,37343.92%+5.82 581st
May 2012833,45213.18%−30.74 1193rdEvangelos Venizelos
Jun 2012756,02412.28%−0.80 83rd
Jan 2015289,4694.68%−7.60 207th
Sep 2015341,390
(DISY)
6.29%
(DISY)
+1.13 34thFofi Gennimata
2019457,519
(KINAL)
8.10%
(KINAL)
+1.81 33rd
May 2023676,165
(PASOK–KINAL)
11.46%
(PASOK–KINAL)
+3.36 213rdNikos Androulakis
Jun 2023617,574
(PASOK–KINAL)
11.84%
(PASOK–KINAL)
+0.38 93rd

European Parliament

European Parliament
ElectionVotes%±ppSeats won+/−RankLeader
19812,278,03040.1%New101stAndreas Papandreou
19842,476,49141.6%+1.501st
19892,352,27135.9%−5.712nd
19942,458,61937.6%+1.711st
19992,115,84432.9%−4.712ndCostas Simitis
20042,083,32734.0%+1.112ndGeorge Papandreou
20091,878,85936.6%+2.601st
2014458,403
(Elia)
8.0%
(Elia)
−28.664thEvangelos Venizelos
2019436,726
(KINAL)
7.7%
(KINAL)
−0.303rdFofi Gennimata
2024508,39912.8%+5.1
13rdNikos Androulakis

Party leaders

LeaderPortraitTerm of officePrime Minister
1Andreas Papandreou3 September 197423 June 1996†1981–1989
1993–1996
2Costas Simitis30 June 19968 February 20041996–2004
3George Papandreou8 February 200418 March 20122009–2011
4Evangelos Venizelos18 March 201214 June 2015
5Fofi Gennimata14 June 201525 October 2021†
6Nikos Androulakis12 December 2021Incumbent

See also

References

Notes and References

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  3. Web site: Οι επίσημοι και ανεπίσημοι ύμνοι των ελληνικών κομμάτων. 29 January 2018 .
  4. Book: Dimitri Almeida. The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. 2012. Routledge. 978-0-415-69374-5. 61.
  5. News: Smith . Helena . Greece approves sweeping austerity measures. 27 November 2019. The Guardian. 6 May 2010.
  6. News: Donadio. Rachel. Greece Approves Tough Measures on Economy . 27 November 2019. The New York Times. 29 June 2011.
  7. News: Politikó Varómetro 95 – Októvrios 2011. el:Πολιτικό Βαρόμετρο 95 – Οκτώβριος 2011. Ultimate Barometer 95 – October 2011. 6 October 2011. Skai Group. el. 7 October 2011.
  8. Web site: Mnimónio éna chróno metá: Apodokimasía, aganáktisi, apaxíosi, anasfáleia. el:Μνημόνιο ένα χρόνο μετά: Αποδοκιμασία, αγανάκτηση, απαξίωση, ανασφάλεια. One Year after the Memorandum: Disapproval, Anger, Disdain, Insecurity. Skai Group. el. 18 May 2011. 19 May 2011.
  9. News: Jeremy Corbyn has defied his critics to become Labour's best hope of survival. Younge. Gary. 22 May 2017. The Guardian. 30 November 2019. 0261-3077.
  10. Richard Clogg, Parties and Elections in Greece, 1987
  11. Richard Clogg, a Concise History of Greece, 2002
  12. Web site: European election results 2009 for Greece. Results of the 2009 European Elections. Ministry of Internal Affairs. 6 October 2009.
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  14. Web site: Greek legislative election, 2009 results . Results of the 2009 Greek legislative elections . Ministry of Internal Affairs . 6 October 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090610163929/http://ekloges.ypes.gr/pages/index.html?lang=en . 10 June 2009 .
  15. Web site: Βουλευτές – Ανά Κοινοβουλευτική Ομάδα . MPs – By Parliamentary Group . hellenicparliament.gr . 25 August 2011.
  16. News: Greece set for deadlock . 7 May 2012 . en.europeonline-magazine.eu . 7 May 2012.
  17. Web site: Founding congress of 'Olive Tree' alliance causes rift in PASOK – Kathimerini. 12 November 2017.
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  20. Web site: Archived copy . 2014-05-27 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140527211603/http://ekloges.ypes.gr/may2014/e/public/index.html . 27 May 2014.
  21. Web site: European elections in Greece: SYRIZA wins, the government resists. Osservatorio Balcani e. Caucaso. 12 November 2017.
  22. News: Greece plunged into crisis as failure to elect president sets up snap election. Helena. Smith. Jill. Treanor. The Guardian . 29 December 2014. 12 November 2017. www.theguardian.com.
  23. Web site: Greece parliament fails to elect president. www.aljazeera.com. 12 November 2017.
  24. Web site: Papandreou's Return to Greek Politics Adds New Wild Card to Election. Nektaria. Stamouli. 2 January 2015. 12 November 2017. The Wall Street Journal.
  25. Web site: Greece's Upcoming Election Just Got More More Complicated. 12 November 2017.
  26. Web site: Former Greek PM Papandreou sets up new party, complicating election outlook. James. Mackenzie. 3 January 2015. 12 November 2017. The Sydney Morning Herald.
  27. News: Former Greek PM Papandreou sets up new party, complicating election outlook. Reuters. MacKenzie. James. 2 January 2015. 2015-01-03.
  28. Web site: Papandreou's Return to Greek Politics Adds New Wild Card to Election. Stamouli. Nektaria. The Wall Street Journal. 2 January 2015. 2015-01-03.
  29. Web site: Papandreou to launch new party. Kathimerini. 2 January 2015. 2015-01-03.
  30. Web site: Welcome to nginx eaa1a9e1db47ffcca16305566a6efba4!185.15.56.1 . 2015-01-26 . dead . https://archive.today/20150126122621/http://ekloges.ypes.gr/current/v/public/index.htm . 26 January 2015.
  31. News: PASOK and DIMAR Cooperation in Greek Elections - GreekReporter.com. Greekreporter.com. 30 August 2015. 12 November 2017. Makris . A. .
  32. Web site: PASOK seals vote pact with DIMAR – Kathimerini. 12 November 2017.
  33. Web site: Domain Names, Web Hosting, Managed WordPress Hosting, SSL Certificates – Papaki. www.ethnos.gr. 12 November 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171113112809/http://www.ethnos.gr/article.asp?catid=22767&subid=2&pubid=64241648. 13 November 2017. dead.
  34. News: Greek Elections: Official Final Results - GreekReporter.com. Greekreporter.com. 21 September 2015. 12 November 2017. Papapostolou . Anastasios .
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  36. Web site: Center-left candidates brace for Sunday's leadership vote – Kathimerini. 12 November 2017.
  37. News: Fofi Gennimata Closes in on Leadership of New Centre-Left Party in Greece - GreekReporter.com. Greekreporter.com. 12 November 2017. 28 March 2018. Kokkinidis . Tasos .
  38. Web site: Gennimata, Androulakis head for center-left leader poll runoff – Kathimerini. ekathimerini.com. 28 March 2018.
  39. News: New Center-Left Coalition Party Elects PASOK Leader Fofi Gennimata - GreekReporter.com. Greekreporter.com. 20 November 2017. 28 March 2018. Ioannou . Theo .
  40. Web site: Gennimata elected leader of the center-left party to be created – Kathimerini. ekathimerini.com. 28 March 2018.
  41. Web site: Name of center-left grouping to be Movement for Change – Kathimerini. ekathimerini.com. 28 March 2018.
  42. News: Movement of Change: Greek Centre-Left Coalition Unveils Name - GreekReporter.com. Greekreporter.com. 28 November 2017. 28 March 2018. Ioannou . Theo .
  43. http://www.kathimerini.gr/972649/article/epikairothta/politikh/apoxwrhsh-apo-to-potami-meta-to-diazygio-me-to-kinal "Αποχώρηση από το Ποτάμι μετά το διαζύγιο με το ΚΙΝΑΛ"
  44. https://www.cnn.gr/news/politiki/story/162588/symfonia-ton-prespon-diagrafei-theoxaropoylo-i-fofi-dialyetai-to-kinal "Συμφωνία των Πρεσπών"
  45. Web site: Venizelos quits socialist KINAL Kathimerini . 2019-07-08 . www.ekathimerini.com . en.
  46. Web site: Nationwide National elections – July 2019 . 2022-07-06 . ekloges.ypes.gr.
  47. Web site: 7 July 2019 . Gennimata: KINAL will mount responsible, policy-based opposition . Athens-Macedonian News Agency.
  48. Web site: 25 October 2021 . Greek Socialist leader Gennimata dies after long illness . . English.
  49. https://greekreporter.com/2021/12/12/nikos-androulakis-elected-leader-greece-center-left/ Nikos Androulakis Elected New Leader of Greece's Center-Left
  50. Web site: 9 May 2022 . PASOK, the return: Over 170K KINAL members vote for name change . Keep Talking Greece . en-US.
  51. Web site: 24 May 2022 . PASOK returns to the green sun . . English.
  52. Web site: National elections – May 2023 .
  53. Web site: national election-May 2023 .
  54. News: Διαμάντης . Αλέξανδρος . Εκλογές 2023 – ΠΑΣΟΚ: Ο Νίκος Ανδρουλάκης «έδειξε» τις προθέσεις του – Στόχος η αξιωματική αντιπολίτευση . ΕΘΝΟΣ .
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