By Antonis Antzolettos

In the 2023 elections, in the Centers, according to exit polls, the New Democracy was prevalent with PASOK following. In the European elections the picture has been reversed and now the battle is open. “Wedge,” according to Pulse’s latest poll, appears to be coming in for Alexis Tsipras. He loses from Nikos Androulakis in the center, but he has a greater basis in the center -left.

At the level of leaders, Kyriakos Mitsotakis continues to have a great deal of resonance in the center and even higher than the New Democracy has the same audience. The same is true for Nikos Androulakis who follows. The audience of the center is considered to be more easily approached, since they are moderate, has no absolute political commitment – identification and in many cases decides at the last minute.

The parties have even more reasons than they used to focus on the “gray zone”. The New Democracy wishes at all costs to re -find the 30% zone and bring back voters who brought it in 2019 and 2023 autonomous power. Opposition parties are still looking for who will lead the conflict that will follow until the government’s elections.

The mapping of the undecided pie gives many interesting elements with the parties after the round of polls that saw the light of publicity last week taking “paper and pencil” and calculations. In the latest Pulse poll, those who have not come to an end are 17% of respondents, recording a 2% increase.

The largest percentage of about gray (4/10) appears to be consisting of citizens who had not voted in the 2023 elections and seem to change their attitude. Of the others who have not decided, about 3/10, had supported the blue line in the last ballot box. They are the group of Piraeus’s unplanned voters who have not chosen any other political housing and therefore in New Democracy have targeted them. The remaining 30% are distributed to the minority parties with most (about 1/10) coming from SYRIZA.

Koumoundourou, with the large decline in its rates, has supplied both smaller formations and the “gray zone”. Generally in the center -left there is a waiting attitude and a great deal of concern due to Alexis Tsipras. There is a lot of people who are doubting, but traditionally move on this ideological line and looking for it.

The parties place particular emphasis on the ages that have to approach and say they have not come to terms with what they will support when the ballots are set up.

According to the same data undecided are the younger age (17-29 years) and the middle (30-44) at 60%. Those between 45-59 and 60+ are more suppressed.

The undecided are a very crucial party of voters, as it is what will determine not only the end result, but also if the distribution of forces will look like polls or whether it is different. Only by gaining this part of the population can a government majority secure a comfortable dominance and respectively an opposition party make the overthrow.