“New Democracy always prioritizes the ballot box and what interests them every time is the ballot box,” said the president of PASOK – Movement for Change Nikos Androulakis from Preveza, a while ago, in an open gathering in the historic center of the city, launching an attack on Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and government policies.

Nikos Androulakis began his speech with honorable mentions to “the late Andreas Papandreou and Giorgos Gennimatas, but also to Paraskeias Avgerinos, architects and initiators of the greatest gift to the Greek people, the National Health System”, while he emphasized that in PASOK “we do not have just a story, we also have a specific offer, many of our ideas, our values, were put into practice and are still visible today all over Greece”.

“To finally close this era of arrogance”, as the president of PASOK said, and in view of the long historical course, we come to ask for the trust of the Greek people because in the next national elections they must have two choices and the first dominant choice it should be PASOK and the Democratic Party.

Mr. Androulakis said that Development is the result of the flood of European resources, the billions of the Recovery Fund are what create the conditions today and many citizens feel that the economy is doing better and he continued:

“However, when all these billions end, what will be left, will there be something left in the Preveza Hospital, will there be something left in the Education infrastructure, will there be something left in relation to inequalities, will there be something left for the demographic ;

The Greek people, as he mentioned, gave a large percentage of 41% to the ND, but this one year after the mandate to Kyriakos Mitsotakis, he was faced with great disasters in Thessaly and Evros because there was no planning to deal with problems due to Climate change, but and precisely and oligopolies “in food, energy, health, Banks.

Nikos Androulakis, who was accompanied by PASOK MEP candidates, at noon visited the General Hospital of Preveza, which faces serious shortages of medical staff.