*** Welcome to piglix ***

Greek legislative election, 1981

Greek legislative election, 1981
Greece
← 1977 18 October 1981 1985 →

All 300 seats to the Greek Parliament
151 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
  Andreas Papandreou.jpg Charilaos Florakis.JPG
Leader Andreas Papandreou Georgios Rallis Charilaos Florakis
Party PASOK ND KKE
Leader since 3 September 1974 1980 1974
Last election 93 seats, 25.34% 171 seats, 41.84% 11 seats, 9.36%
Seats won 172 115 13
Seat change +79 -56 +2
Popular vote 2,726,309 2,034,496 620,302
Percentage 48.07% 35.87% 10.93%
Swing +22.73% -5.97% +1.57%

PM before election

Georgios Rallis
ND

Subsequent PM

Andreas Papandreou
PASOK


Georgios Rallis
ND

Andreas Papandreou
PASOK

Parliamentary elections were held in Greece on Sunday, 18 October 1981. The Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK), led by Andreas Papandreou, faced New Democracy, led by Georgios Rallis. Papandreou achieved a landslide and PASOK formed the first socialist government in the history of Greece (in 1963 Centrists had formed a government under the leadership of George Papandreou, Andreas' father, but their party, Center Union, was not a socialist party but a centrist, social-liberal one).

185 of the 300 seats were won by PASOK or the Communist Party: both openly eurosceptic. This was the high point of Greek euroscepticism, coming just months after the country's accession to the European Communities.

Papandreou's new government introduced several interesting reforms in the wake of its victory (legalization of civil wedding, new family law, nationalization of certain private companies, etc.).

The main opposition party, New Democracy, faced serious internal conflicts. Georgios Rallis was forced to resign after the defeat and he was succeeded by Evangelos Averoff, former minister under Karamanlis governments. In 1984 Averof resigned because of health problems and Konstantinos Mitsotakis became the new leader of New Democracy. Noteworthy, Mitsotakis and Papandreou were both centrists before 1967 and they belonged to the same party, George Papandreou's Center Union. Nevertheless, they were strong opponents and they never liked each other. Papandreou was calling Mitsotakis "a defector, an apostate", because in 1965 he defected from the ruling Center Union and participated in a new government pleasing to Constantine II, who had just accepted George Papandreou's resignation after a serious disagreement between the King and the prime minister.


...
Wikipedia

...