Prime Minister Antonis Samaras presented his party’s proposals for sweeping changes to the Greek Constitution, this week.
The proposed reforms, outlined before an audience of New Democracy members at the Athens Concert Hall, cannot be implemented until the next Parliament sits, and the next general elections are not due until 2016. But Samaras presented the suggested overhaul as part of a broader bid to cast his party, which leads the ruling coalition, as forward-looking and progressive ahead of looming local authority and European Parliament elections.
“In 1974 we changed Greece,” he said. “We are changing it again now, with much effort and sacrifice.”
“For this new Greece, I will not back down, I will not compromise,” Samaras added. “I call on you to give me the mandate for us to change Greece together.”
The reforms he proposed included re-examining parliamentary immunity for Members of Parliaments (MPs) setting a limit on the time prime ministers, local authority officials and trade unionists can serve in office, and improving the transparency of party finances. Another key reform the prime minister suggested is for ministers to be obliged to give up their seats in Parliament and for a reduction in the number of MPs that sit in the House. Samaras did not elaborate on the latter point but recent reports have suggested that the number could be whittled down to 200 from the current 300.
The prime minsiter also called for the president to be chosen by the Greek public rather than elected by Parliament and for the powers of the president, whose role is chiefly ceremonial, to be broadened.
Source: ekathimerini