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In order to pass most laws, a government needs a simple majority of 151 seats. But to have any chance of success, it would require considerably more than that, especially amid the social turmoil of the past two-and-a-half years of harsh austerity in Greece. Together with PASOK and the Democratic Left, Samaras' party would have 179 legislators, enjoying a strong majority of 28 seats. Hopes that a deal can be struck boosted Greek share prices, with the battered Athens stock exchange gaining 2.2 percent in early midday trading. Greece's short-term borrowing costs declined slightly on Tuesday, with the interest for a new 13-week treasury bill issue reaching 4.31 percent, down from 4.34 percent last month. The total sum raised was (EURO)1.3 billion ($1.64 billion), with the auction 2.2 times oversubscribed. Samaras' three-day mandate to form a government expires on Wednesday. If it fails, Syriza would get a chance to form a government, followed by the Socialists. But Tsipras has said he will not even try to create a government. Venizelos has advocated circumventing the mandate process and proceeding straight to a meeting of party leaders under President Karolos Papoulias. Venizelos has insisted that Syriza should participate in any coalition government, in what appears more an attempt to show the left-wing party up as intransigent rather than a realistic effort to drag it into governance. Setting apart their bitter rivalry stemming from four decades of what was effectively a two-party system, New Democracy and PASOK took part in a brief coalition government earlier this year.
[Associated
Press;
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