Τρίτη 14 Ιουλίου 2015

Tsipras live — Alternatives during summit were: agreement or unruly bankruptcy

Tsipras live — Alternatives during summit were: agreement or unruly bankruptcy

tsipras_live

‘Crunch time’ continues for Greek PM, his government and the country’s finances
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras will again go on national television on Tuesday evening, not to make another proclamation or to promote a specific answer to any referendum, but this time to answer questions by two presenters on the state-run broadcaster (ERT).
His latest live television appearance comes a day before an utterly crucial vote in Parliament on the agreement worked out by Athens with its European creditors on Monday morning.
Tsipras’ comments, in bullet form:
– There is  real problem with the pension system
– It’s not progressive to retire at the age of 45
– This adaptation is milder than cuts in wages, pensions
– Wages, pensions are not cut, but VAT rates are raised; that’s the irrationality of the policy that is imposed on us
– There is a commitment for a restructuring of the debt
– We’ve left Grexit behind
– The agreemetn includes harsh reforms, but there is a prospect, which was not in the June 25 ultimatum
– I tried to demand as much as I could
– There was also a Schauble version
– Alternatives were: agreement or an unruly bankruptcy
-The night before last was a bad evening for Greece
– Today I want to only speak truths and not beautify things
– I took risks. In life and in politics you must take risks
– When I decided on the referendum, I had the conviction that it would give us the necessary extension (of time). There was a vindictive stance on the part of the parnters

– I have convinced by the fact that I took matters to an extreme. I took things to the point they had never gone. Someone may criticize me that I went too far. No one can criticize me that I didn’t do everything I could. We reached a point that was outside the framework of the support program
– They were giving us one billion for five months, and then again negotiations for new terms. We had an absolute impasse 10 days ago … You can criticize me for an illusion that this Europe can be defeated, but you cannot criticize me for lying
– I am not willing to flee from my responsibilities
– Within this harsh framework there are possibilities for redistribution (of wealth?)
– I hope that the economy will return to growth rates, so that we can redistribute in a fairer manner
– It’s clear that the country is receiving 82 billion euros, and that it must maneuver within the a fiscal framework as dictated by this agreement
– The EKAS bonus (for low-income pensioners) will not be abolished, but it will be replaced in 2020
– We struggled so that pensions would not be reduced
– I do not want to beautify anything, but on the issue of pensions we managed to avoid cuts
– There is no ‘bridge-program’ as yet. Some people are blocking it
– When asked about the prospect of expelling MPs from ruling SYRIZA, ‘that’s not my (political) culture, nor of my party’s’
– We’re amid critical conditions
– There is no Plan B
– When I understood this I communicated with Merkel and told her that I consider this as unfathomable. She told me that is was not her plan, and the story ended there
– Schauble’s option was a consensual option. I understood this when Yanis Varoufakis conveyed a message in March or April
– Those that had transferred their money abroad would have gotten by just fine. That (Grexit) was not a leftist choice
– An disorderly default (bankruptcy) would have led to the issuance of a (new) currency
– The country does not have cash reserves to back a new currency
– The decision was the one I made, with the criterion of what is best in the interest of the country at the moment and the working classes. This is reality
– I will not say that I brought about a success story, like the previous (governments)
– Asked of a break-up of ruling SYRIZA, he said he will do whatever possible to keep the leftist party intact
– A consensual Grexit would have meant a return to a national currency with the continuation of the memorandum
– Certain hardcore conservatives in Europe do not feel comfortable with the existence of a government that is different than the framework they are used to