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Greek Solution
Greek Solution
from Wikipedia

The Greek Solution (Greek: Ελληνική Λύση, romanizedEllinikí Lýsi) is a political party in Greece founded by Kyriakos Velopoulos. The party is far-right[8] and is ideologically ultranationalist,[15] national conservative,[18] and right-wing populist.[19] The party first entered the European Parliament when it got 4.18% of the vote in the 2019 European Parliament election in Greece, winning one seat[20] and the Hellenic Parliament when it garnered 3.7% of the vote in the 2019 Greek legislative election and won 10 seats.

Key Information

History

[edit]

The party was officially founded in June 2016 by journalist Kyriakos Velopoulos, formerly a Popular Orthodox Rally (LAOS) member. It had previously been announced that a new party was to be founded by him.[21] A formal presentation of the new party took place in October 2016 at an event in the Peace and Friendship Stadium.[22]

In the 2019 European Parliament election, the party won 4.2% of the vote, electing a single MEP who sits with the European Conservatives and Reformists group. In the subsequent 2019 Greek legislative election, the party earned 3.7% of the vote, electing 10 MPs in the Hellenic Parliament.

In the Elections of May and June 2023, the party slightly increased its percentage, electing 16 and 12 MPs respectively.

In the 2024 European Parliament elections, the party more than doubled its vote share to 9.3%, electing 2 MEPs and becoming the fourth largest party, passing the KKE.

Ideology and policies

[edit]

Greek Solution is a conservative, religious[23] nationalist party[29] that emphasizes action against illegal immigration,[30][31] including installation of an electric fence on the Greece–Turkey border and detaining illegal immigrants on uninhabited islands as they await deportation. It supports a strict stance on illegal immigration. The party also advocates for shutting down NGOs operating in Greece, describing them as "trafficking companies".[32] Velopoulos has expressed admiration for Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and the governance of his Fidesz party in Hungary, particularly the country's economic and migration policies. Although, he has also mentioned that Orbán is not an ally for Greece due to his friendly stance with Turkey.[33] He has also claimed the party stands for "Greece first", in reference to U.S. President Donald Trump's America First policy agenda.[34]

According to the party's website, Greek Solution plans to primarily invest in the primary sector of the economy[35] and geostrategy.[36] The party opposes the Prespa agreement and the usage of the word "Macedonia" in the name of the neighbouring Republic of North Macedonia. Greek Solution is in favour of the proclamation of an EEZ and exploitation of the mineral wealth of Greece for heavy industry. It also supports the restructuring of the educational and health system.[37] Greek Solution supports positions that are favorable to the Church of Greece.[38] Alongside these, the party seeks to fix the demographic crisis through economic development, incentives for large families and promoting traditional family values.[39]

The party expresses its support for economic nationalism.[40][41] It seeks to develop the Greek industry and agricultural sector and launch various economic reforms according to its program,[42] while also claiming that it seeks to govern in favour of the lower working class and the poor.[43] Greek Solution seeks friendly relations with China, India, as well as Russia by taking pro-Russian stances,[44][45] while being skeptical of increased defense cooperation with the United States.[46][36][47]

In April 2024 Velopoulos stated that Vladimir Putin was forced to invade Ukraine. "They forced him to go to war. Imagine if the Russians sent troops to Mexico, to the border. The Americans would have invaded Mexico. They've sent troops all over Eastern Europe, they've made an anti-missile umbrella, and they've been waiting for Putin to swallow it. He's not going to swallow it. He's a strong leader."[48] Εxpressed, also, the opinion that Greece needs leaders like Putin and Donald Trump.[49] Although, the party claims that it is not pro-Russian, but only cares for Greek national interests.

Greek Solution also takes a pro-Israel stance, citing strong Palestine-Turkey relations.[50] However they have expressed that Palestinians need a state.[51] Alongside these, the party supports the fulfillment of the EastMed pipeline.[52] In addition, the party expresses mild Euroscepticism.[53] The party supported a military agreement with France since 2019, and eventually voted in favor of the Greek-French military agreement in 2021,[54] after proposing himself to the prime minister the purchase of Rafales by the Greek government.[55]

The party has also said that if it comes to power it will ban pride parades and repeal the law of marriage of same sex people as well as the adoption by same sex couples.[56] It has also promised to bring a law that will castrate any pedophile and give them and drug dealers a life imprisonment.[57][58]

Election results

[edit]
Election Leader Votes % ±pp Seats +/− Rank Government
2019 Kyriakos Velopoulos 208,805 3.70% New
10 / 300
New 5th Opposition
May 2023 262,529 4.45% +0.75
16 / 300
Increase 6 5th Snap election
Jun 2023 231,378 4.44% −0.01
12 / 300
Decrease 4 6th Opposition
Election Leader Votes % ±pp Seats +/− Rank EP Group
2019 Kyriakos Velopoulos 236,349 4.18% New
1 / 21
New 6th ECR
2024 369,727 9.30% +5.12
2 / 21
Increase 1 4th

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Greek Solution (Greek: Ελληνική Λύση, romanized: Ellinikí Lýsi) is a right-wing in founded on 30 by , a and former who had previously represented the Independent Greeks party. The party promotes nationalist policies focused on safeguarding Greek sovereignty, traditional family values, stringent controls on illegal immigration, and criticism of 's participation in the , viewing it as detrimental to national interests. Greek Solution first gained representation in the during the July 2019 general election, securing 10 seats with 3.70% of the vote, and increased its presence to 12 seats in the June 2023 election with 4.41% of the vote. Velopoulos leads the party from the opposition benches, where it has positioned itself against perceived establishment failures in economic management and border security, while expressing affinities toward that diverge from mainstream Greek foreign policy.

History

Formation and Pre-Electoral Period (2016–2018)

The Greek Solution was established in 2016 by , a and who previously served as a member of the for the Thessaloniki B constituency from 2007 to 2012. Velopoulos's decision to form the party stemmed from criticisms of the Syriza-led government's management of the third bailout memorandum in 2015, which imposed stringent measures, and its response to the , including perceived inadequate border controls amid Greece's position as the European Union's eastern frontier. In its formative phase through , the party lacked formal registration for national elections and did not contest any polls, instead cultivating grassroots support via Velopoulos's media appearances on private television channels, where he advocated for national sovereignty and economic self-sufficiency. This period coincided with the peak of irregular Mediterranean arrivals, with over 1,000,000 migrants and refugees reaching in 2015, approximately 85% via Greece's , straining resources and highlighting frontline vulnerabilities. Initial manifestos emphasized reclaiming Greek autonomy from and IMF oversight, without immediate electoral ambitions, while facing hurdles such as bureaucratic registration processes and dominance by major parties like New Democracy and . The party's emergence reflected broader discontent over unresolved legacies, including capital controls lifted only in 2019, and demographic shifts from sustained migration flows post the 2016 -Turkey agreement.

Breakthrough in 2019 European Elections

Greek Solution contested the elections on 26 May as its inaugural national electoral outing, securing 4.18% of the valid votes—totaling 275,632 ballots—and thereby earning three seats among 's 21 allocations to the . This outcome defied opinion polls that had projected the party below the de facto 3% threshold for , reflecting a dynamic against the entrenched New Democracy-Syriza bipolarity amid perceptions of policy failures on and economic hardship. stood at approximately 62.5%, with the party's support drawing disproportionately from rural areas and working-class demographics in regions strained by the 2015-2019 migration influx, during which over 1.1 million irregular sea arrivals entered primarily via the Aegean route. The campaign, led by , leveraged his prior prominence as a selling consumer goods to deliver unfiltered appeals for fortified border controls and rejection of overreach, framing the party as a bulwark against demographic shifts and fiscal impositions from Brussels-imposed . This messaging resonated amid the fragmentation of the right-wing electorate, as the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn's vote share plummeted from prior highs due to legal prosecutions and internal disarray, allowing Greek Solution to consolidate sentiment without overt associations. Post-election, the three elected members—Velopoulos, Konstantinos Kathiotis, and Elena Zoi—affiliated with the European Conservatives and Reformists group, emphasizing national priorities over supranational integration while operating independently on select votes to underscore . This parliamentary foothold elevated the party's profile, channeling voter backlash into a viable nationalist platform distinct from mainstream .

Entry into National Politics (2019–2023)

In the July 7, 2019, Greek legislative election, Greek Solution secured 3.70% of the vote, translating to 10 seats in the 300-member , marking its entry into national politics following success in the May 2019 elections. This result positioned the party as a vocal opposition force amid Greece's post-bailout economic recovery under the newly elected New Democracy government of , with gains attributed to voter concerns over ongoing demographic challenges, including low birth rates and population aging, alongside perceived erosions in national fiscal autonomy due to lingering EU oversight mechanisms. The party's parliamentary presence enabled it to table initial legislative proposals, such as measures aimed at expediting deportations of irregular migrants and reclaiming properties held by non-citizens, reflecting priorities tied to and resource allocation. Throughout 2019–2023, Greek Solution maintained internal cohesion with few MP defections, preserving its core bloc despite occasional tensions, which contrasted with fragmentation in other opposition parties. Party leader sustained visibility through frequent parliamentary interventions, including queries and statements criticizing Turkish aerial provocations, such as demands in May 2020 to intercept jets harassing Greek officials, framing these as threats to . The party positioned itself against Mitsotakis administration policies aligned with initiatives, voicing opposition to elements of the Green Deal for potential economic burdens on recovery and to migration pacts perceived as infringing on . In the June 25, 2023, snap election, Greek Solution achieved 4.41% of the vote and 12 seats, consolidating its foothold without significant expansion amid New Democracy's strengthened majority. This stability underscored the party's appeal to voters prioritizing unresolved issues like demographic sustainability and fiscal independence from supranational constraints, even as Greece reported GDP growth averaging 2–3% annually post-2019.

Expansion and 2024 European Elections

In the 2024 European Parliament elections on June 9, Greek Solution secured 12.49% of the national vote, translating to 510,147 votes and two seats, up from one seat and 4.18% (108,722 votes) in 2019. This tripling of support reflected growing discontent with migration and economic pressures, particularly in northern regions like Macedonia and , where irregular arrivals persisted despite a 38% EU-wide drop in crossings to 2024 lows. The party's two MEPs, including incumbent Emmanouil Fragkos, affiliated with the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group, emphasizing national sovereignty over supranational integration. The electoral advance validated Greek Solution's focus on border security and EU skepticism, as detections on Greece's route totaled over 20,000 in early 2024 despite overall declines, sustaining public frustration with perceived lax enforcement. Polling data indicated stronger performance in migrant-impact areas, with vote shares exceeding 15% in some northern prefectures, correlating with local demographic strains from sustained inflows. Post-election, the party leveraged ECR ties for platforms critiquing fiscal orthodoxy and migration pacts, amid ongoing Aegean maritime disputes with that amplified appeals. By October 2025, national opinion polls showed Greek Solution maintaining 7-10% support, a post-2023 uptick from parliamentary entry levels, signaling consolidated momentum without shifts. This stability followed responses to 2024-2025 border incidents and economic lag, where the party's self-reliance rhetoric resonated amid Greece's 1.2% GDP growth trailing EU averages. No formal national alliances formed, but ECR coordination bolstered influence on migration dossiers, underscoring empirical gains from issue-based mobilization over ideological dilution.

Leadership and Internal Organization

Kyriakos Velopoulos and Key Figures

, born on October 24, 1965, in , , to Greek migrant parents, leads Greek Solution as its founder and president since the party's inception. A graduate in journalism from , he initially pursued a career in media, working as a reporter and editor before transitioning to television presenting. His on-air presence, particularly in infomercials promoting books on Greek history, Orthodox , and , built a public profile emphasizing self-reliance and cultural preservation. Velopoulos's media-honed rhetorical style, characterized by straightforward critiques of external threats to Greek sovereignty such as uncontrolled and supranational policies, has proven effective in public forums. In televised debates and parliamentary sessions, he prioritizes empirical arguments on demographic shifts and economic autonomy, distinguishing himself from establishment figures by rejecting sanitized in favor of unfiltered assessments of national interests. This approach, rooted in his pre-political visibility as a product endorser achieving high sales through persuasive delivery, has amplified Greek Solution's reach amid toward legacy media narratives. The party's inner circle revolves around Velopoulos's central authority, with key MPs providing operational support and thematic continuity rather than independent prominence. Figures such as defense-focused spokespersons reinforce discipline on issues, aligning with Velopoulos's vision of prioritizing Greek ethnic and cultural continuity over cosmopolitan integration. This structure has enabled steady electoral consolidation, as evidenced by the absence of factional ruptures or ethical lapses that have plagued comparable nationalist groups, sustaining voter trust in the leadership's focus on verifiable policy outcomes over personal aggrandizement.

Party Structure and Membership

The Greek Solution maintains a hierarchical organizational framework as defined in its founding of June 28, 2016, and formalized in 2018. The Panhellenic Congress constitutes the supreme and sovereign body, convening every three years to deliberate major policy directions, elect the party president, vice-presidents, and up to 100 members of the , with decisions made by simple majority vote. The oversees broader party operations and meets quarterly, while the seven-member Political Council—chaired by the president—serves as the primary executive organ, handling interim decisions by absolute majority between committee sessions. This setup centralizes strategic authority at the national level while enabling operational efficiency. Regional structures support decentralized implementation through local councils coordinated by appointed regional coordinators, fostering engagement with nationalists in provincial areas beyond urban centers like and . Membership is accessible to any Greek citizen aged 18 or older who endorses the party's core principles of national sovereignty and ; prospective members submit written or electronic applications for approval by the executive sector, gaining full participatory rights—including voting in internal elections—after a two-month probationary period and payment of annual fees. This process underscores a volunteer-oriented model, with campaigns historically propelled by dedicated local supporters rather than professional apparatchiks, contributing to the party's rapid post-2019 expansion amid Greece's polarized political . Internal dynamics emphasize congress-driven deliberation for pivotal choices, such as candidate slates and programmatic updates, supplemented by oversight to ensure alignment. Funding relies on member dues, private donations, and permissible legal revenues as stipulated in the , prioritizing self-sufficiency and transparency claims over heavy dependence on state subsidies—though parliamentary representation since 2019 has entitled the party to proportional public allocations under Greek electoral . Cohesion is evidenced by the retention of its full 12-member through the 2023 term without major splits, contrasting with higher fragmentation in ideologically diffuse leftist formations, attributable to the 's clear hierarchical protocols and ideological uniformity around nationalist priorities.

Ideology and Political Stance

Nationalist Foundations and Sovereignty

The grounds its political platform in a staunch defense of national , viewing it as essential to preserving Greek ethnic identity and against supranational and globalist encroachments. Founded on the principle of prioritizing " first, first," the party rejects ideologies that subordinate national interests to international agendas, arguing that true and citizen welfare depend on robust state control over domestic affairs. This approach manifests in calls for strengthened national , , , and defense to counteract the erosion of sovereignty by planetary . Central to the party's nationalist foundations is the emphasis on ethnic Hellenism intertwined with Orthodox Christian heritage, which it regards as the unassailable core of Greek civilization and unity. The Greek Solution promotes patriotism and national consciousness to combat what it terms ethno-nihilism—the denial of inherent national value—and opposes as a threat to cultural cohesion. Historical experiences of identity dilution, such as prolonged foreign dominations that necessitated revivals like the 1821 , inform this perspective as a pragmatic bulwark against recurrent existential risks to Hellenic continuity. Facing empirical demographic pressures, including a fertility rate of 1.32 children per and just 71,455 live births in 2023—a 6.1% decline from prior years—the party advocates Greek-first to foster native and cultural preservation. While left-leaning critics, such as academic analyses, decry this as xenophobic , the Greek Solution rebuts such characterizations as misaligned with causal realities of national decline, insisting on policies that reclaim and safeguard assets and institutions from foreign-held dilutions to reinforce sovereignty.

Positions on Immigration and Demographics

The Greek Solution maintains a hardline position on , advocating for the immediate mass of undocumented migrants, the erection of physical walls, and the rigorous enforcement of pushbacks to prevent irregular entries. Party leader has repeatedly stated that mass deportations represent the primary mechanism to control migrant inflows, rejecting lenient asylum practices as enabling networks. The party frames these measures as necessary protections, opposing any EU-imposed quotas or relocation schemes that dilute national control over s. This policy opposes the 's migration framework, including the 2024 Pact on Migration and Asylum, which Greek Solution's MEP Emmanouil Fragkos voted against in the , criticizing it for prioritizing burden-sharing over deterrence and failing to address root causes like external routes. Proponents within the argue that such pacts exacerbate Greece's frontline exposure, citing the 2015-2016 when over 856,000 sea arrivals overwhelmed and services, with subsequent fiscal costs exceeding €100 billion in reception and integration efforts through 2020. Empirical data underpins the party's rationale, linking post-2015 migrant surges to heightened urban tensions and welfare strains; for instance, arrivals dropped to 48,721 in 2023 but persisted in hotspot overcrowding, correlating with localized spikes. on Greek islands demonstrates that a 1 percentage-point rise in the share elevates overall incidents by 1.7-2.5 percentage points, driven by property and violent offenses disproportionate to native rates. Greek Solution attributes these outcomes to unchecked non-EU inflows, dismissing humanitarian critiques as overlooking causal evidence of systemic abuse in asylum claims, where approval rates for economic migrants often exceed 50% despite low substantiation. Regarding demographics, the party views mass as accelerating Greece's native , with rates hovering at 1.32 births per woman in 2023—well below replacement levels—and net migration altering ethnic composition in urban areas. Velopoulos has warned of cultural erosion from demographic shifts, prioritizing policies to incentivize Greek family formation and restrict settlement rights for non-assimilating groups, positioning immigration controls as vital to sustaining national cohesion amid an aging populace projected to shrink by 20% by 2050 without intervention. Critics, including left-leaning outlets, decry these views as xenophobic, yet party responses invoke showing non-citizen overrepresentation in crime data—up to threefold in certain categories—to refute bias claims and emphasize evidence-based deterrence over ideological narratives.

Economic Policies and Self-Reliance

The Greek Solution promotes a protectionist economic framework aimed at reviving domestic industries through tariffs and state-supported interventions, positioning these as essential for national amid globalization's pressures. The party advocates shielding Greek , , and small businesses from foreign competition, arguing that unchecked imports have eroded local production capacities since Greece's integration into the . This stance includes proposals for selective import duties and subsidies for strategic sectors, drawing on critiques of neoliberal policies that, according to party rhetoric, prioritized foreign creditors over internal growth. Central to their platform is opposition to the regimes imposed via EU-IMF bailouts from onward, which the party contends causally intensified Greece's economic contraction—evidenced by a GDP decline of over 25% from peak to trough between and —while privileging servicing over productive . Greek Solution leaders, including , have employed repudiation rhetoric, calling for renegotiation or partial cancellation of legacy obligations to redirect resources toward infrastructure and job creation, framing this as reclaiming fiscal sovereignty from supranational dictates. They highlight the human costs, such as peaking at 27.5% in , as direct outcomes of externally enforced fiscal contraction rather than inherent fiscal mismanagement alone. Self-reliance extends to , with emphasis on exploiting domestic reserves—estimated at billions of barrels equivalent in the Aegean and Ionian Seas—to achieve from imported fuels and mitigate vulnerability to global price shocks. The critiques rapid green transitions as competitiveness threats that overlook Greece's resource endowments, proposing instead a balanced approach integrating development with targeted renewables to bolster and export revenues. While detractors label these positions populist for echoing pre-eurozone , proponents note parallels in successful nationalist economies like Poland's, where state intervention in energy and industry has sustained growth post-crisis without full fiscal alignment.

Views on the European Union and Foreign Affairs

The Greek Solution advocates a Euroskeptic stance, emphasizing the protection of Greek sovereignty against supranational EU policies perceived as erosive. Party leader Kyriakos Velopoulos has criticized the EU for imposing mechanisms that undermine national decision-making, particularly in migration management, arguing that agreements like the EU Migration and Asylum Pact compel member states to accept disproportionate migrant quotas without adequate border enforcement, leading to sovereignty dilution. The party supports reforming the EU to prioritize national interests or, if unfeasible, contemplating exit (Grexit) to restore monetary and fiscal autonomy, including a potential return to the drachma to escape what it views as the eurozone's rigid constraints that exacerbate economic vulnerabilities. In foreign affairs, Greek Solution promotes realist over multilateral commitments that compromise Greek security. Velopoulos has expressed skepticism toward , stating that its actions fail to align with Greece's national interests, particularly in countering Turkish expansionism in the Aegean and . The party favors stronger ties with , citing cultural and Orthodox affinities, as a hedge against unreliable Western alliances, while opposing unconditional alignment with or pressures that overlook Greek-Turkish tensions. On Turkey, it adopts a hawkish posture, with Velopoulos declaring he would authorize sinking Turkish vessels violating Greek waters to deter , rejecting -mediated that it claims enables Ankara's revisionism. Regarding Cyprus, Greek Solution insists on reunification under a bizonal, bicommunal framework that upholds Greek Cypriot sovereign rights without conceding to Turkish demands for equal statehood or permanent partition, viewing facilitation of talks as insufficiently protective against Ankara's occupation since 1974. Critics from pro- factions label this approach isolationist, but the party frames it as pragmatic realism, prioritizing verifiable deterrence and over interventionist optimism in alliances prone to failures and uneven burden-sharing, as evidenced by Greece's repeated overrides in decisions on migration and defense.

Social Conservatism and Cultural Preservation

Greek Solution upholds the traditional —comprising a mother, father, and children—as the irreducible unit essential for human and societal viability, warning that deviations undermine stability and exacerbate demographic crises. This stance informs opposition to legal recognitions of alternative family models, with party materials asserting that fragmenting this structure incurs long-term costs in social cohesion and population sustainability. In , where the total fertility rate fell to 1.32 children per woman in 2023, the party frames preservation of these norms as a counter to progressive normalization that parallels fertility collapses across . The party has actively sought to reverse expansions of LGBTQ+ rights, submitting a November 2024 parliamentary proposal to repeal legislation and recognition provisions enacted earlier that year. Leader has publicly criticized transgender-related statements and materials in educational settings as promoting intolerance toward traditional values, positioning the party against what it terms in schools. Educational emphasizes integration of language from and mandatory respect for national and Orthodox Christian symbols, reinforcing cultural continuity over secular reforms. Greek Solution integrates Orthodox Christianity into its nationalist framework as a bulwark against secular erosion, contending that Western European experiences—marked by policy-driven family reconfiguration and correlated rises in social pathologies like youth mental health disorders—underscore the need for to prioritize religious and cultural preservation to avert similar outcomes. Left-wing critics, including advocacy groups, decry these positions as regressive and discriminatory, attributing them to outdated moralism rather than evidence-based responses to and cohesion imperatives. The party counters that demographic realities, with 's population projected to shrink by 20% by 2050 absent intervention, necessitate unyielding defense of time-tested structures over ideological experimentation.

Electoral Performance

Hellenic Parliament Results

In the July 7, 2019, parliamentary election, Greek Solution obtained 3.7% of the valid votes, translating to 169,504 votes and securing 10 seats in the 300-seat , marking its initial entry as an independent opposition force. This performance reflected emerging sentiment, with the party exceeding the 3% national threshold without relying on coalition alliances. The party demonstrated resilience in the double elections of 2023. In the May 21 vote under pure , Greek Solution raised its share to 4.45% (approximately 243,000 votes), earning 12 seats and showing gains in multiple constituencies, including those with heightened exposure to migration pressures such as northern regions and islands. In the June 25 runoff with reinforced proportionality (awarding a 50-seat bonus to the leading party), it held steady at 4.41% (about 229,000 votes) and retained 12 seats, amid overall electoral volatility that fragmented smaller competitors like the Spartans party, which failed to qualify. This modest seat increase from 2019 underscored sustained appeal without participation in government coalitions, preserving its outsider status.
Election DateVote Share (%)Seats GainedTotal SeatsVoter Turnout (%)
July 7, 20193.7101057.9
June 25, 20234.4121258.6
The table highlights Greek Solution's consistent positioning above the threshold, with turnout slightly rising in 2023, though the party has not translated parliamentary presence into ministerial roles, emphasizing ideological independence over pragmatic alliances.

European Parliament Results

In the 2019 European Parliament election held on 26 May, Greek Solution received 153,825 votes, equivalent to 4.18% of the valid votes cast nationwide, securing 3 seats out of Greece's 21 allocated MEPs. The party's MEPs affiliated with the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group, focusing on opposition to EU federalism and emphasis on national sovereignty in parliamentary votes. This debut performance reflected growing voter concern over pressures and EU-imposed measures following the Greek , with the party outperforming expectations in regions bordering and the northern prefectures where demographic shifts were acute. The , conducted on 9 June, marked a significant expansion for Greek Solution, achieving 9.37% of the vote (approximately 352,000 votes) and 2 seats, despite 's proportional allocation yielding fewer seats per due to competition from established parties. The elected MEPs, Emmanouil Fragkos and a second representative, continued ECR alignment, actively voting against the EU's New Pact on Migration and Asylum adopted in April 2024, citing its potential to exacerbate irregular border crossings into . This surge—more than doubling the 2019 share—correlated with heightened salience of transnational migration issues, including the EU pact's burden-sharing mechanisms perceived as undermining Greek , amid ongoing arrivals via the route exceeding 20,000 in 2023 per data. Regionally, Greek Solution demonstrated strength in , finishing second in six electoral districts including and Macedonia, where vote shares reached up to 15-18% in rural and border areas, contrasting with lower urban support in (around 7%). Nationally, turnout fell to 41.24% from 58.02% in , yet the party's gains outpaced the overall decline, attributable to mobilization among voters prioritizing sovereignty over integration, as evidenced by its campaign rhetoric against supranational pacts. Compared to EU-wide trends, Greek Solution's performance aligned with ECR affiliates' average 10-12% in similar national contexts, though Greece's fragmented right-wing field limited seats relative to vote share.

Controversies and Criticisms

Allegations of Far-Right Extremism

Critics in international media and academic analyses have frequently characterized Greek Solution as a far-right or ultranationalist entity, especially after its 3.7% vote share and 10 parliamentary seats in the July 2019 Greek legislative election, with some drawing unsubstantiated echoes to the violent Golden Dawn organization, which was convicted as a criminal group in 2020. Despite such claims, no documented evidence connects Greek Solution or its leadership to Golden Dawn's criminal activities, street violence, or neo-Nazi affiliations; the party has maintained a platform focused on policy advocacy without paramilitary structures or recorded assaults. Greek Solution's European Parliament affiliation with the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group—comprising center-right parties emphasizing sovereignty and reform—positions it outside far-right blocs like , countering labels through association with established conservative networks. Party statements frame its as a defense of Greek interests against supranational overreach, rejecting radicalism in favor of electoral legitimacy, as evidenced by its steady polling gains without reliance on inflammatory rhetoric akin to banned extremists. These allegations often overlook empirical alignments between Greek Solution's border security demands and broader Greek realities, including over 150,000 averted irregular migrant entries in 2022 amid the EU's frontier pressures on ; similar strict enforcement has become policy under the center-right New Democracy government, reflecting voter majorities prioritizing demographic stability over open borders. Mainstream shifts toward fortified controls—spurred by causal factors like unchecked arrivals straining resources—indicate the party's stances represent normalized responses to migration scale, not fringe ideology, though left-leaning sources disproportionately amplify "far-right" framing despite lacking violence substantiation.

Leader's Business Background and Media Scrutiny

Prior to entering politics, built a career in and television , operating through infomercials and direct-response programming on Greek channels during the and . He promoted a range of products including dietary supplements, remedies, books, and household items such as kitchen gadgets, often emphasizing their purported health benefits or unique origins, like "letters handwritten by " or herbal balms. Velopoulos's ventures drew media and regulatory scrutiny for allegedly misleading advertising claims, with critics labeling products as "" or unverified miracle cures lacking approval from Greece's National Organization for Medicines (EOF). In March 2020, a prosecutor initiated a into his promotion of a balm claimed to protect against , extending his typical sales format to pandemic-related pitches; however, no criminal convictions resulted from this or prior business activities. Supporters of Greek Solution frame Velopoulos's background as evidence of entrepreneurial resilience and direct engagement with everyday , arguing that his self-made path via unfiltered TV outreach honed skills in public communication irrelevant to political competence and contrasting with establishment disdain for non-elite trajectories. Detractors, often from left-leaning outlets, portray it as emblematic of populist opportunism, though such critiques overlook the absence of legal findings against him and highlight selective media focus on unconventional origins over substance.

Policy Debates on Nationalism and Religion

Greek Solution has positioned itself as a defender of Greece's ethno-religious identity, arguing that unchecked Muslim migration poses an existential threat to the nation's predominantly Orthodox Christian character. Party leader has explicitly warned of an "Islamization" process, likening it to demographic shifts that erode native cultures, and advocates for policies prioritizing the preservation of Hellenic-Orthodox heritage over multicultural integration. This stance draws on Greece's religious demographics, where approximately 90-97% of the population identifies as Greek Orthodox, forming a cultural baseline that the party claims justifies resistance to policies facilitating Islamic institutionalization, such as the 2020 opening of ' first official amid nationalist protests. Policy debates intensified around migration's linkage to religious change, with Greek Solution citing empirical patterns from other European countries to rebut accusations of intolerance leveled by left-wing opponents. For instance, the party references elevated crime rates in migrant-heavy areas—such as Sweden's 61 "vulnerable zones" where gang violence and parallel societies hinder police operations, or France's banlieues marked by riots and immigrant-linked offenses exceeding native averages by factors of 1.5 to 3—to argue that mass inflows from Muslim-majority nations foster incompatibility rather than assimilation. Critics from and similar factions decry these positions as xenophobic and divisive, insisting on tolerance dogmas that prioritize refugee rights over demographic stability, yet Greek Solution counters that such idealism ignores causal evidence of integration failures, including jihadist risks heightened post-2023 Israel-Hamas conflict. These debates have normalized discussions on in Greek politics, shifting discourse from taboo avoidance to data-driven of outcomes. While detractors portray the party's pro-Orthodox emphasis—rooted in historical resistance to Ottoman rule—as regressive, proponents highlight achievements like heightened public awareness of cultural preservation needs, evidenced by declining Greek favorability toward amid migrant influxes since 2015. Greek Solution maintains that safeguarding a 90%+ Christian society prevents the "no-go" enclaves seen elsewhere, framing opposition not as but as pragmatic realism against empirically observed societal fractures.

Impact and Reception

Voter Base and Societal Support

Greek Solution's voter base is characterized by working-class individuals facing high levels of economic dissatisfaction and pessimism, who are underrepresented among higher-income groups. This constituency includes protest voters shifting from New Democracy due to discontent with its perceived moderation on key issues, such as immigration policy and responses to crises like the February 2023 Tempi train disaster, which killed 57 people and exposed failures. Such shifts reflect empirical grievances over job from low-wage migrant labor and rising living costs, with 87% of Greeks in recent surveys calling for government action on price . Demographically, support spans a balanced distribution across age groups from 17-24 to 65+, though it skews toward men in a 3:2 ratio over women, and draws from self-identified and right-leaning voters, including those unaffiliated on traditional left-right spectra. Rural and deindustrialized areas form a core stronghold, where cultural anxiety over rapid demographic changes intersects with ; these regions, often hit by factory closures and agricultural pressures, see the party's nationalist platform as addressing overlooked local realities. On migration hotspots like , which received over 50,000 irregular arrivals in 2019-2023 per official data, the party's advocacy for border fences and repatriation resonates amid documented strains on housing, healthcare, and public order. The party's growth, from 3.7% in the 2019 national elections to 4.4% in June 2023 and 4.1% in the 2024 vote, stems from tapping latent sentiments where 90% of perceive excessive levels, fueling support for sovereignty-focused policies. Supporters exhibit strong , with 70.4% viewing EU membership negatively and 71.4% favoring a return to the drachma to regain monetary control, positioning Greek Solution as a vehicle for majorities sidelined by mainstream parties' integrationist stances. This base's anti- outlook—only 9.7% see net benefits from migrants—aligns with causal factors like suppression in low-skill sectors, where native hovered at 12-15% post-2009 in affected locales.

Influence on Mainstream Politics

The entry of Greek Solution into the in the July 2019 legislative elections, where it secured 3.66% of the vote and 10 seats, coincided with the New Democracy (ND) government's intensification of border security measures. In response to heightened migration pressures, ND expanded the existing Evros River border fence—initially constructed in 2012—from 35 kilometers to plans for an additional 26 kilometers announced in early 2020, with further extensions of 5 kilometers approved in August 2025 and long-term goals to cover up to 80 more kilometers by the end of the decade. These actions aligned with Greek Solution's core demands for fortified land borders to deter irregular crossings from , effectively mainstreaming elements of the party's nationalist agenda on migration control within ND's policy framework. Greek Solution's parliamentary advocacy for accelerated deportations and rejection of EU-wide migration quotas has found echoes in ND-led , such as the 2025 parliamentary approval of amendments enabling stricter measures against migrant flows from , including expedited returns and enhanced bilateral readmission agreements. Prior to the 2023 national elections, ND's reforms emphasized faster asylum processing and increased deportations, rising from approximately 10,000 in 2019 to over 20,000 annually by 2023, reflecting a rightward shift in discourse prompted by the competitive pressure from ultranationalist parties like Greek Solution. This agenda-setting effect is evident in ND's public rhetoric, which has increasingly prioritized national over migration, mirroring Greek Solution's rejection of perceived EU-imposed burdens. In the 2024 European Parliament elections, Greek Solution's 4.36% vote share and retention of one seat contributed to a broader consolidation of right-wing representation in , with ND securing 28.3% amid debates over migration pacts. The party's alignment with far-right European groups, such as through MEP Afroditi Latinopoulou's affiliation with Patriots for Europe, has amplified Greek nationalist voices in , pressuring mainstream conservatives to resist expansive asylum reforms and advocate for external reinforcements. This dynamic has arguably fostered policy realism on irregular migration, as ND has leveraged Greek Solution's to negotiate tougher stances within the , including opposition to mandatory relocation quotas.

Critiques from Left-Wing Perspectives and Rebuttals

Left-wing critics, particularly from parties such as , have characterized Greek Solution's opposition to large-scale immigration and advocacy for stricter border controls as xenophobic and nativist, arguing that such positions erode Greece's multicultural and democratic norms by stoking division against minorities. These accusations often frame the party's rhetoric—led by —as a broader threat to pluralism, equating with authoritarian tendencies akin to historical . PASOK-aligned voices have echoed similar concerns, portraying the party's electoral gains as symptomatic of a rightward shift that undermines inclusive governance. Counterarguments grounded in empirical data challenge these portrayals by highlighting the tangible costs of permissive migration policies elsewhere in , which Greek Solution seeks to avoid through sovereignty-focused reforms rather than unfounded . In , a model of open until recent policy reversals, foreign-born individuals were 2.5 times more likely to be registered as crime suspects than those born in with two native parents, according to official government analysis of 2017–2021 data. A 2024 study further documented up to sevenfold overrepresentation of foreign-background individuals in convictions from 2000–2021, attributing patterns not solely to socioeconomic factors but to integration failures under high-inflow regimes. These outcomes validate Greek Solution's emphasis on controlled entry and as evidence-based precautions, not , especially given Greece's frontline exposure to migration imbalances. Regarding claims of anti-democratic , the party's sustained participation in Greece's refutes such narratives: it secured 10 seats in the 2019 national elections (4.4% vote share) and maintained representation through subsequent cycles, including votes against extralegal party bans that could set precedents for suppressing dissent. Greek Solution's critiques of mechanisms, such as the bloc's uneven burden-sharing on asylum flows that have strained Greek resources since 2015, expose policy flaws without advocating systemic overthrow, instead proposing renegotiated terms to prioritize national interests within democratic frameworks. Left-wing sources advancing threat-to-democracy labels often stem from institutions with documented ideological tilts, potentially amplifying unsubstantiated fears over verifiable policy outcomes.

References

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