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| | Panayote Dimitras, Are Greek Socialists On the Way Out? |
 | | PASOK's losses benefited the smaller—apolitical or extreme left—protest parties that received altogether 5,5% instead of 2,5%; but also two of the three parliamentary parties of the left, the traditional communist KKE -that rose from 5,5% to 8,5%- and the socialist splinter DIKKI -that also rose from 4,5% to 7%. |
 | | PASOK hopes that, in 2000, these factors will be marginalized and most of these voters will return to it, in the face of the possibility that voting for KKE or DIKKI could contribute to the return of “the worse of the two evils,” ND, to power. |
 | | If such a strong “patriotic and anti-imperialist” front emerges, PASOK has the choice to fight it outright so as to discredit it (such choice was never the strong point of the low key prime minister) or to move towards its direction so as to minimize potential electoral losses, thus jeopardizing Greece's future. |
| www.hartford-hwp.com /archives/62/408.html (1190 words) |
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