Greece seals deal on new coalition under EU pressure

ATHENS/PARIS, (Reuters) – Greek Prime Minister George  Papandreou and conservative opposition leader Antonis Samaras  agreed yesterday on a new coalition government to approve a euro  zone bailout deal before calling elections, the office of the  president said.

George Papandreou

Papandreou will not lead the new administration, the office  said in a statement issued after the European Union gave Greece  24 hours to explain how it will form a unity government to enact  its 130 billion euro emergency funding deal.

The two men sealed the deal after talks led by President  Karolos Papoulias, but it remained sketchy as they have yet to  agree even on who will be the new prime minister to lead Greece  through its economic, political and social crisis.

“Tomorrow there will be new communication between the prime  minister and the opposition leader on who will be the leader of  the new government,” the statement said.

Antonis Samaras

The statement also made no mention of how long the interim  government would last before it calls early elections.

Papandreou and Samaras had been scrambling to hammer out a  deal before a meeting by finance ministers of euro countries in  Brussels today, to show that Greece is serious about taking  steps needed to stave off bankruptcy.

One political analyst welcomed the deal, struck after doubts  began to emerge over whether Greece could stay in the euro zone.

“I’m relieved. It’s a very positive development. It was  imposed by society and the need to stay in the euro zone, and it  will not be overturned,” said Costas Panagopoulos, head of ALCO  polling agency.

The EU has made clear it wants a unity government in Greece  to ensure consensus support for reform and restore confidence     after a week that saw Papandreou first call for a referendum on  the bailout and then backtrack under international pressure.

Earlier European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner  Olli Rehn told Reuters finance ministers from countries that use  the single currency would insist on hearing a plan for a unity  government from their Greek colleague Evangelos Venizelos at  today’s meeting in Brussels.

“We have called for a national unity government and remain  persuaded that it is the convincing way of restoring confidence  and meeting the commitments,” he told Reuters. “We need a  convincing report on this by Finance Minister Venizelos tomorrow  in the Eurogroup.”