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"We need three or four months ... to rationalize the situation, restore calm to the country, get rid of that euro100 billion in debt and build international credibility," Protopappas told state NET radio. "Then we can get back at each others' throats for a month with elections
-- at that point everyone will be able to wait for us." The conservatives don't want to wait. An angry New Democracy party leader Antonis Samaras insisted Thursday that Papandreou has to go now, and demanded snap elections
-- within the next six weeks if possible. "Mr. Papandreou pretends that he didn't understand what I told him," he said. "I called on him to resign." Protopappas argued that holding early elections now would drive Greece to bankruptcy. "The electoral process takes about 40 days, and soon we be unable to pay salaries and pensions, while nobody will be able to negotiate with us on the bailout agreement," Protopappas said.
Polls indicate the Greek public is close to the breaking point after more than 20 months of harsh austerity cuts and tax hikes. A wave of general strikes and protests have often degenerated into riots. Recent opinion surveys show 90 percent of Greeks oppose Papandreou's policies and his party has just 20 percent public support. A Communist-party backed labor union is organizing a protest outside parliament later Friday.
[Associated
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