Friday, 12 December 2025

The Jacobin on the authoritarian rule of Mitsotakis, tool of Soros, as his mafia network works hand in hand with Ursula von der Leyen to pocket billions, prepares conscription, digital IDs

 

From media

Greece’s conservative government under Kyriakos Mitsotakis has taken disturbing authoritarian measures against its opponents. It’s also ever less of an outlier, as Europe races toward a right-wing, increasingly militarized order. (Lionel Ng / Bloomberg via Getty Images)



More than six years on, that promised “normal” looks less like stability and more like a permanent state of managed scandal. Mitsotakis’s tenure has unfolded in a landscape marred by allegations of corruption, financial mismanagement, illegal surveillance, cover-ups, abuse of European Union funds, manipulation of the justice system, and a tightly controlled propaganda machine financed through state resources.


It’s something we hadn’t seen since the fall of the military dictatorship. In that half-century of democracy, there has been no comparable case of a governing party that so stubbornly refused to police its own ranks, shielded itself from scrutiny with such discipline, and retaliated so aggressively against anyone who dares challenge its record. This is made all the easier by a weakened opposition — and a wider left that has been disorganized for years. This has given New Democracy a virtually free hand to reshape Greek politics.


The Greek state in the postausterity era is starting to resemble a neoliberal authoritarian model of governance, in which market dogma and executive power march in lockstep while democratic accountability is treated as an optional extra. This has all been enabled and sanitized by the European Union, which today sells Greece as a model of responsible governance. In the current term, the European Parliament’s biggest bloc — the center-right European People’s Party (EPP), of which New Democracy is a member — has repeatedly moved to protect Mitsotakis and his government, blocking attempts to confront mounting evidence and allegations of systemic corruption — including those under investigation by Europe’s first chief prosecutor, Laura Kövesi.


https://jacobin.com/2025/12/greece-new-democracy-mitsotakis-corruption

No comments:

Post a Comment