2007 Greek legislative election


Parliamentary elections were held in Greece on Sunday, September 16, 2007, to elect the 300 members of the Hellenic Parliament. The leading party for a second term was New Democracy under the leadership of Kostas Karamanlis with 41.83%, followed by George Papandreou and Panhellenic Socialist Movement with 38.10%. New Democracy managed to secure an absolute but narrow majority of 152 out of 300 parliament seats. The populist Popular Orthodox Rally entered the parliament for the first time with 10 seats, while the parties of the left, the Communist Party of Greece and the Coalition of the Radical Left, enjoyed a significant increase in their votes. KKE got 8.15% of the votes and secured 22 parliament seats and SYRIZA got 5.04% of the votes and 14 seats.
The difference of nearly four percentage points between the first two parties resulted in George Papandreou announcing that he would seek reaffirmation of his party leadership, with Evangelos Venizelos and Kostas Skandalidis also declaring candidacy for the post.

Procedure

There were concerns that the election could return a hung parliament, mainly due to the recently revised Greek electoral law. Although it preserved the 3% threshold necessary for a party to enter parliament, it decreased the number of seats automatically awarded to the leading party. Parliamentary majority was considered more difficult, especially after the early projection that five parties would cross this threshold for the first time after the metapolitefsi.
According to the electoral law, the first-past-the post party was automatically awarded a bonus of 40 parliamentary seats. The remaining 260 seats were divided among all parties that achieved a minimum 3% nationwide vote tally, strictly in proportion to their polling returns. Since a majority of 151 seats was required, the leading party should secure at least 111 seats in order to be able to form a government. Karamanlis had stated that in the event that no party should manage to achieve a majority, he would seek a new election. Papandreou had vaguely indicated that he may have pursued an alliance with the left, however the SYRIZA and KKE parties had categorically dismissed any possibility of participating in a coalition with any of the major parties.
No opinion polls were allowed to be published after September 1. The polls publicized prior to the election had concluded that:
The law traditionally requires that voting begins at "sunrise" and ends at "sunset". In practice this is rounded up to the nearest top of the hour. Voting began at 7 am and concluded at 7 pm. 7 pm was also the time when media outlets publicized their exit polls and issued their predictions. According to SingularLogic, the information technology contractor of the Ministry of the Interior, initial returns would not reach statistical significance before 11 pm and firm estimates might not emerge until after midnight. Voting took place in 20,623 polling stations – mostly schools – throughout the country, each of which catered to 400–500 voters on average.

Opinion polls, January–August 2007

A collection of opinion polls taken before the elections is listed below. According to a law, which was voted by the Greek parliament, publication of opinion polls is forbidden in the fortnight prior to the election date. Therefore, the last day when opinion polls were published was September 1, 2007, and practically all opinion polling firms published their final public reports on August 31, 2007, in time for the evening news.
Polling FirmDate PublishedNDPASOKKKESYRIZA
LAOSOther NoneUnsure
Public Issue/VPRC14 January 200743.039.07.54.03.53.0
GPO15 January 200735.933.77.34.14.40.74.49.3
Kapa Research10 February 200737.535.97.43.63.212.4
Public Issue/VPRC11 February 200743.039.57.54.03.52.5
RASS25 February 200736.733.95.82.82.718.1
Public Issue/VPRC11 March 200743.039.57.04.53.52.5
Metron Analysis22 March 200737.135.97.03.13.613.3
ALCO30 March 200733.933.45.52.82.222.2
Kapa Research30 March 200736.935.97.03.43.912.9
GPO2 April 200736.034.27.04.04.50.93.99.5
Public Issue/VPRC13 April 200742.539.07.04.54.03.0
MRB27 April 200735.933.56.74.13.716.1
Public Issue/VPRC13 May 200742.539.56.55.03.53.0
MRB24 May 200735.733.76.34.44.715.2
Metron Analysis2 June 200733.432.06.83.64.419.8
Public Issue/VPRC8 June 200743.039.07.04.54.02.5
GPO4 June 200735.534.57.14.44.92.33.38.0
ALCO15 June 200734.234.06.32.93.51.62.514.7
MRB15 June 200736.334.07.04.43.714.6
Metron Analysis21 June 200736.835.86.43.83.813.4
Kapa Research30 June 200736.135.17.64.34.20.612.1
Public Issue/VPRC16 July 200742.538.57.54.53.53.5
GPO22 August 200736.234.67.14.24.65.87.5
Metron Analysis22 August 200731.029.57.04.33.52.56.815.4
MRB23 August 200736.834.86.84.54.01.32.89.0
Kapa Research26 August 200734.933.67.24.94.11,613.7
ALCO27 August 200735.034.26.53.43.60.84.111.8
MRB28 August 200735.233.27.34.43.92.24.36.7
Metron Analysis29 August 200729.728.18.14.73.62.610.517.4
GPO29 August 200736.034.87.04.54.92.110.7
ALCO29 August 200731.630.96.23.43.31.88.715.9
Public Issue/VPRC *31 August 200742.038.08.55.04.02.5
MRB31 August 200735.433.37.54.73.7
GPO31 August 200737.436.07.64.24.7
ALCO31 August 200731.530.86.53.73.6

The Greek media outlets issued their exit polls at 19:00 local time.
Media outletPolling FirmNDPASOKKKESYRIZALAOSOthers/
blank/
invalid
ERTRass42.2%38.5%7.5%5.0%3.5%3.3%
ANT11Metron Analysis40.4–42.8%36.8–39.2%7.4–8.8%4.8–6.0%3.2–4.2%2.8–3.6%
AlphaMRB40.8–42.8%37.5–39.5%7.5–8.5%4.5–6.0%3.5–4.5%2.0–3.5%
AlterALCO40.6–42.6%37.8–39.8%6.4- 8%4.6–5.8%3.5–4.5%2–3.5%
MegaGPO41–43%37.5–39.5%7.5–9%4.5–6%3.5-4%2.5-3%
SkaiV-PRC41–43%36–38%7.5–9.5%5–6%3.5–4.5%2.5–3.5%
StarKapa Research41.9%38.4%7.7%5.3%4.0%2.7%
exit poll average:all41.9%38.2%7.9%5.3%3.8%3.0%
Mega²GPO42.0%
153 seats
37.8%
101 seats
8.2%
22 seats
5.0%
13 seats
4.0%
11 seats
3.0%
-

1 Revised exit poll presented at 20:30 local time

² Statistical projection based on official returns, presented at 21:30 local time – claimed margin of error: 0.2%

Results

The following table shows the tallies with all the votes counted.
At 1 am, September 17, 2007, PASOK leader George Papandreou conceded defeat and Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis thanked the electorate for granting him and his party a renewed term in office. Papandreou also stated that he will seek his party's direct reaffirmation in his leadership, and Evangelos Venizelos, PASOK's informal #2, declared himself "present" in this process. Papandreou went on and retained his leadership.

Results by region