This is a Kylaris Article of Recognition.

1980 Piraean general election

Jump to navigation Jump to search

1980 Piraean general election
Second Piraean Republic
← 1948 1 February 1980 1982 →

All 125 seats to the Piraean Courts
61 seats needed for a majority
Turnout79.8%
Party Leader % Seats
People's Party Ioannis Apostolou 54.4 68
Piraese Socialist Workers Union Andrianos Rodiales 32 40
Centre Union Stefanos Sarropoulos-Larraz 6.4 8
Democratic Socialism Nikos Procopiiadis 2.4 3
Progressive Federation Theodoros Kouras 2.4 3
Humanist Centre-Greeen Theofanis Kanatos 0.8 1
New Force-National Alliance Dorotheos Apostolakis 0.98 1
National Party Charalambos Artinidis 0.8 1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Piraea February 1980 Election Map.png
Most voted-for party by region in Piraea proper
Premier before Premier after
Nikolaos Makarezos.jpg Ioannis Christodoulopoulos
Military dictatorship
De Facto Premier
Ioannis Apostolou
LK
Bezoek premier Karamanlis van Griekenland Van Agt in gesprek met Karamanlis, Bestanddeelnr 929-6548 (cropped).jpg

The 1980 Piraean general election was the first democratic election of Piraea after the military dictatorship to elect the members of the Piraean Courts (now Senate) and the new premier of the republic. It was extraordinarily held on 1 February 1980 and marked the start of the Piraean metapolitefsi.

The elections were agreed in 1979, after the military junta lost the national plebiscite in which it sought to legitimise a new leader. In September of 1979, the two largest parties of Piraea, the PSEE and the People's Party, signed, together with other minor legal parties, the conditions for the transition under the Hankssun 300 Pact; the military junta agreed the disassociation from the new government and institutions on the conditions of inmunity and the outlaw of the Piraese Section of the Workers' International. Most of the members of the illegal PTED participated under the Progressive Federation platform together with other clandestine leftist minor groups.

After the general elections the 1st Legislature of the Piraean Senate were formed, with an absolute majority from the People's Party, which counted with the PSEE as the main opposition party. The new premier, Ioannis Apostolou was invested with the votes of LK and Centre Union, while the post-Functionalist far-right proposed their abstention.

Background

1979 national plebiscite

The year prior to the general elections, the military junta proposed and celebrated a national plebiscite aimed to legitimise a new term of the recently elected junta leader, Ioannis Christodoulopoulos, who was appointed by the dictator of the Second Piraean Republic, Konstantinos Athanopoulos, in the minutes prior to his death. The plebiscite counted with an important campaign of the two options, "Yes" (Ναι; endorsed by the political right and the junta) and "No" (Όχι; endorsed by the left and society groups in clandestine), which gradually normalised political activity in the country.

However, the rejection of the junta's proposal, forced the military to initiate contacts with the political world to host elections and transition towards democracy. Christodoulopoulos held several contacts with the Ioannis Apostolou (People's Party) and Andrianos Rodiales (PSEE).

1979 Hankssun 300 Pact

The 4 September 1979, the military junta and the leaders of the main political parties signed the Hankssun 300 Pact, an agreement that specified the conditions of the metapolitefsi. The agreement became controversial in the cores of both the democratic right and most of the left, as it granted immunity to junta leaders and censored the Piraese Section of Workers' International from participating in the election. However, Apostolou and Rodiales argued that the pact was crucial for the dissociation of the army from the politics.

Campaign

Posters used by Andrianos Rodiales (top left), Ioannis Apostolou (top right), Dorotheos Apostolakis (bottom left) and the Progressive Federation (bottom right).

Following the 1979 national plebiscite, the military junta met with the candidates Andrianos Rodiales (PSEE) and Ioannis Apostolou to draft the path towards the democratisation of the country and the immunity of former military leaders. After the Hankssun 300 Pact, the Ministry of Interior and Information legalised a number of political parties, allowing Apostolou to form the People's Party, which reunited most of the centre-right and right-wing. The pact proved controversial for the Piraean political system, and most importantly, for the centre-left, where the several members of the PSEE formed Democratic Socialism due to the discomfort with PSEE allowing the censorship of the Piraese Section of Workers' International (PTED). Sectors associated with the PTED , however, formed the Progressive Federation, under the leadership of Theodoros Kouras.

Although several incidents were produced during political rallies, in especially of the left in hands of members of far-right militias, the campaign was marked by a festive atmosphere. The PSEE counted with an overwhelming support from other Euclean social democratic parties and by a large portion of the Piraean diaspora (back then, severely marked by the population that opposed the regime). At first, the military junta sought to openly support New Force and eventually ignoring People's Party; however, this let Apostolou to expose a more moderate discourse, granting its growth in opinion polls. The People's Party also counted with the support of the largest companies of Piraea and a great portion of the entrepeneurial sector, which became decisive in a generally more advanced campaign.

Censorship and observers

During the conversations that led to the Hankssun 300 Pact, the two political parties faced the hostility of the military leadership, although the three sides reached a joint document at the end. The censorship, heavily instaurated during the Second Pirean Republic, was alleviated during the campaign: the military junta allowed the formation of political parties and allowed party political broadcast to all political parties. However, rallies of the centre-left and left counted with less hours of television broadcast in comparison with those of the centre-right and right.  

The censorship during the campaign was exercised mostly during political interviews and the two televised debates. Similarly as what happened during the 1979 plebiscite, the junta forbidden parties from expressing themselves about Human Rights violations and other topics surrounding the honour of the Armed Forces. A 2 minutes political broadcast granted to the Progressive Federation was censored and not allowed by the Ministry of Interior and Information, as it counted with explicit content against the regime.

The PSEE demanded the presence of foreign electoral observers, which was granted by the junta to the Euclean Community, Azmara (which sent a special delegation due to political pressure exercised by the Piraean diaspora living in Aalmsted), South Euclean People's Republic and _.

Televised debates

1980 Piraean general election debates
Date Broadcaster Moderator(s) Participants —   Name  Participant    N  Party not invited/did not participate   NI  Not invited  Notes
LK PSEE EK DS PO AK-P VD-ES EKN
4 Nov ΠΡΤ 1 Chirstoforos Contou Ioannis Apostolou Andrianos Rodiales Stefanos Sarropoulos-Larraz Nikos Procopiiadis NI NI NI NI
12 Dec Έννα Media Konstantinos Chronellis Ioannis Apostolou Andrianos Rodiales Stefanos Sarropoulos-Larraz Nikos Procopiiadis NI Theofanis Kanatos NI NI

Participating parties

Candidacy Leading candidate Ideology
LK
Bezoek premier Karamanlis van Griekenland Van Agt in gesprek met Karamanlis, Bestanddeelnr 929-6548 (cropped).jpg
Ioannis Apostolou Liberal conservatism
Economic liberalism
Christian democracy
PSEE
Persconferentie van Andreas Papandreaou in Poort van Cleve te Amsterdam, Bestanddeelnr 921-2801.jpg
Andrianos Rodiales Progressivism
Social democracy
Secularism
Pro-Eucleanism
Centre Union
Mitsotakis 1992.jpg
Stefanos Sarropoulos-Larraz Neoliberalism
Liberal conservatism
Right-wing populism
Democratic Socialism
Franco Nicolazzi 1983.jpg
Nikos Procopiiadis [a] Social democracy
Democratic socialism
Pro-Euclean Community
Progressive Federation
GEORGIOS MAVROS.jpg
Theodoros Kouras [b] Councilism
Democratic socialism
Los Verdes Chile.pngHumanist Centre-Greeen (Piraea) Theofanis Kanatos Progressivism
Green politics
Humanism
Social liberalism
VD-ES
Georgios Papadopoulos.jpg
Dorotheos Apostolakis Social conservatism
Militarism
EKO Charalambos Artinidis Social conservatism
Militarism
Nationalism
Piraean irredentism

Results

The results showed important changes from the previous national plebiscite; several analysts predicted the first government of the centre-left due to the contundent rejection of the population to the continuity of the military junta. However, during the campaign, the military leadership was seen as divided, supporting the far-right candidates of New Force-National Alliance and National Party, leaving Ioannis Apostolou, from the moderate centre-right wing, without the mark of the military dictatorship. The PSEE, which was considered a preferred option, saw internal divisions after signing the Hankssun 300 Pact, with Democratic Socialism dividing the voting share.

The results, however, marked a significant trend that has been present in the politics of Piraea since then; with the region of Foinikas being predominantly conservative, together with the north-western neighborhoods of Alikianos and its "central almond". This, in contrast to the regions of Lampi and Samariá, where the centre-left and left has been a lot more stronger.

40 3 3 1 8 1 1 68
Piraese Socialist Workers Union PO DS AK-P EK EKN VD-ES People's Party
Map of results of Alikianos during the 1979 plebiscite.
Map of results of Alikianos during the 1980 general elections, with similar trends happening. .
1st Piraean Senate.png
PartyVotes%Seats
People's Party68
Piraese Socialist Workers Union40
Centre Union8
Democratic Socialism3
Progressive Federation3
Humanist Centre-Greeen1
New Force-National Alliance1
National Party1
Total125
Source: Ministry of Interior and Information

Aftermath

After the general elections, Piraea formed the first democratically elected government since the First Republic. This ignited a number of political issues that were going to be tackled by the political system as a whole; most importantly, the government of Apostolou faced the end of censorship in PRT, the legalisation of the Piraese Section of the Workers' International and the General Confederation of Piraese Workers, the democratisation of the military and the creation of a new constitutional framework, which resulted in the Third Republic. A new economic panorama and the issue regarding the Euclean integration were also heavily discussed topics during the first years of the Apostolou governments. In 1982, after having legalised the PTED, Ioannis Apostolou called a snap election together with the PSEE, in order to "reconstruct the political system".

Government formation and investiture

Following the general elections, the leader of the military junta, Ioannis Christodoulopoulos, issued a live statement on television, congratulating the elected candidate and expressing the "personal wishes" to hold an official meeting before the investiture session. The first government of Ioannis Apostolou was formed the 15 February 1980, with the absolute majority of the People's Party and votes of the Centre Union. The two far-right parties considered the abstention.

Candidate Date Vote LK PSEE EK DS PO Los Verdes Chile.pngHumanist Centre-Greeen (Piraea) VD-ES EKO Total
Bezoek premier Karamanlis van Griekenland Van Agt in gesprek met Karamanlis, Bestanddeelnr 929-6548 (cropped).jpg

Ioannis Apostolou
Emblem of the Christian Democrat Party of Chile.svg

15 February 1980
Absolute majority required (61/125)
Yes ☑Y 68 8
76 / 125
No 40 3 3 1
47 / 125
Abs. 1 1
2 / 125

Notes

  1. Democratic Socialism was a split from the PSEE after Rodiales signed the Hankssun 300 agreement with Apostolou and the military junta; the party merged again with the PSEE in 1993.
  2. Progressive Federation was the political brand that used several members of the PTED during the elections, since the party was considered illegal by the Ministry of Interior and Information; Progressive Federation was refunded as PTED in 1982.