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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
IN EARLY 1985, MOST POLITICAL OBSERVERS WOULD HAVE forecast the probability of Constantinos Karamanlis's reelection to his second term as president, which seemed the likely prelude to the election due before the end of October 1985. This, it was assumed, would have given Andreas Papandreou's Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) a good chance to repeat the advantage which his party undoubtedly enjoyed in its convincing victory at the election in October 1981, when a significant portion of the electorate, notably from the centre of the political spectrum, felt that it could well afford the risks of voting for all that was implied in PASOK's electoral slogan ‘Change’, so long as Karamanlis remained at the helm with the special powers reserved for the president under the 1975 constitution. The outlook was consequently for an election in or before the autumn of 1985. In fact, PASOK's victory on 2 June was achieved at a different time, for quite different reasons and in quite different circumstances.
1 See Elephantis, Angelos, ‘PASOK and the Elections of 1977’ in Penniman, Howard R. (ed.), Greece at the Polls: the National Elections of 1974 and 1977, Washington DC, The American Enterprise Institute, 1981 Google Scholar.
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3 See Mavrogordatos, George, ‘The Greek Party System’, West European Politics, Volume 7 number 4, 10 1984, pp. 156–69CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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5 Modiano, Mario, Sunday Times, 2 06 1985 Google Scholar.