The solution “to today’s political impasse” is immediate resignation of Mitsotakis and announcement of elections“to leave as elected prime minister after the revelations about a huge scandal, as would happen in any democratic country in Europe”, argues the Stefanos Kasselakis in his article in the “Journal of Editors”, stating that he returns to the camp after the parade in Thebes “moved, renewed, unyielding”.

“Greece will return to normality, whether Kyriakos Mitsotakis wants it or not,” he notes.

The president of SYRIZA-PS cites examples of prime ministers who resigned for much smaller reasons, noting that “we have the governmental masking of a foretold crime which deprived the lives of 57 of our fellow citizens”.

“As the Prime Minister mentioned in the Parliament, “these entered the balance of 41%”, he comments, to emphasize that he proposes to the Prime Minister “exit with dignity to re-measure the “scale”, now that it is revealed that the manipulation of public opinion and the cover-up of the crime were attempted already on the same night of the tragedy”.

He insists on conducting elections and of the European elections with the presence of international observersposing the question “what other advanced Republic has a government that tampers with crime scenes, that edits evidence, that illegally monitors politicians, military, businessmen, that illegally appropriates for partisan reasons confidential personal information of voters?”.

“My own invitation to the prime minister is to facilitate developments by resigning,” he says.

The president of SYRIZA-PS explains why the official opposition party will support the motion of impeachment although he believes that it will be a “cockfight”, in relation to who will be credited, “a procedure-show, which will unfortunately achieve nothing in terms of the essence, the state cover-up of the Tempe crime”.

He comments that “around the motion of censure are lined up all those “progressive” politicians who in the run-up to the elections excluded the successive proposals of SYRIZA-PS for government cooperation, keeping Mitsotakis in power” and emphasizes that “but SYRIZA-PS will never behave like those. There will never be an exception in the attempt to reconcile the democratic forces of the country.” “It is a position of principle and that is why we will support the motion of no confidence against the government, even if it will not have a practical effect”, he emphasizes.