Quote du Jour | Alexis Tsipras’s logic
This is where Alexis Tsipras’s logic loses me. The man has been battered for five months in negotiations that led to proposals that made his pre-election campaign promises seem like a distant memory. The troika appears to have been moving the goalposts even after he was told that his complete capitulation was a “good basis” for discussion and leaked a document full of red ink, giving the world the impression that they wanted to show who is in charge. The troika deleted half of the measures contained in his proposal – the good basis for discussion, that is –effectively demanding him to further concede on VAT, pensions and the labour market, just one week before the programme’s expiry date.
They have made it difficult for him in every imaginable way because they don’t trust him, they don’t like his ideological background and they think that he is setting a bad example for other movements across Europe that question the established eurozone orthodoxy.
They have made these views abundantly clear in the public debate. Naturally this raises the question what makes Alexis Tsipras believe that with a No vote he will find himself in a better negotiating position and that the other side will be in any way inclined to offer him a deal that has repeatedly been denied.