2014–2015 Greek presidential election

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2014–2015 Greek presidential election

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300 members of the Hellenic Parliament
200 (1st & 2nd rounds) or
180 (3rd & 4th)
electoral votes needed to win
 
Nominee Stavros Dimas
(1st–3rd rounds)
Prokopis Pavlopoulos
(4th round)
Nikos Alivizatos
(4th round)
Party ND ND Independent
Alliance ND & PASOK
ANEL
The River & PASOK
Electoral vote 160, 168, 168 233 30

President before election

Karolos Papoulias
PASOK

President after election

Prokopis Pavlopoulos
ND

Indirect presidential elections were held in Greece in December 2014 and February 2015 for the succession to Karolos Papoulias as President of the Hellenic Republic. The candidate of the NDPASOK government, Stavros Dimas, failed to secure the required majority of MPs of the Hellenic Parliament in the first three rounds of voting in December. According to the provisions of the Constitution of Greece, a snap election was held on 25 January 2015, which was won by the left-wing Syriza party. Following the convening of the new Parliament, the presidential election resumed. On 18 February 2015, veteran ND politician Prokopis Pavlopoulos, backed by the Syriza-ANEL coalition government, was elected with 233 votes.

Date

Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and Deputy Prime Minister Evangelos Venizelos asked (9 December) the Speaker of the Parliament for the procedure of presidential elections to move as quickly as possible.

The presidential election was brought forward by a few months, and the first round was held on 17 December, the second on 23 December and the third on 29 December.[1] On 9 December 2014, Samaras announced the candidacy of New Democracy politician Stavros Dimas, jointly supported by the ruling New Democracy–PASOK coalition, for the presidency.[2]

Constitutional provisions

According to Article 32 the

Greek Constitution, the president is elected for a five-year term by the Hellenic Parliament in a special session at least a month before the incumbent's term expires. The first and second rounds require a supermajority of 200 out of the 300-strong body, dropping to 180 on the third.[3][4]

In the event of a non-election even after the third ballot, the parliament is to be dissolved and a

Procedure

Independent
: 6

First three rounds

On the first ballot, held on 17 December, Dimas received 160 votes, i.e. the 155 votes of ND and PASOK, plus five votes from independent MPs. 135 MPs voted "present" and five MPs were absent or abstained.[5]

On the second ballot, held 23 December, Dimas received 168 votes. 131 MPs voted "present" and one MP was absent or abstained.[6] On both ballots, 200 votes would have been necessary for election.

On the third ballot, held 29 December, Dimas again received 168 votes, still not meeting the lowered quorum of 180 votes required to be elected in the third round.[7][8]

Dissolution of Parliament

After being asked by prime minister Samaras, incumbent president Papoulias on 31 December issued a

presidential decree formally dissolving the parliament, as required by the constitution. The new election was set to be held on 25 January and the new parliament to reconvene on 5 February 2015.[9]

Following SYRIZA's victory

PASOK
: 13