The mood in SYRIZA remains unchanged, 24 hours before the start of the extraordinary congress in Gazi. In a new post on Twitter, Stefanos Kasselakis denounces the “87” – continuing last night’s “incident” in Pagrati – that not only are they “cutting delegates, but also adding people who were not elected.”
The former president claims that SYRIZA “is under occupation”. They are going for a “1961 congress,” he says, in which “even the trees” will be delegates (a direct reference to the national elections of October 29, 1961, which went down in history as the most controversial in Greece, with allegations of fraud, famous for the phrase “even the trees voted”).
“Be all elected delegates tomorrow at the Congress venue, on the ramparts,” Kasselakis calls again.
He writes:
“I ask for immediate information.
24 hours before the start of the conference, what is the exact number of delegates?
The certification of the delegates is done by mail to each one individually, so that they cannot be cross-check the names with the lists of the actually elected delegates.
In other words, after failing to make up the difference by cutting delegates, they are now adding persons who were not elected!
SYRIZA is under occupation.
They are going for a ‘1961 congress’, in which the trees will be delegates.
Be all elected delegates tomorrow at the Congress venue, on the ramparts.
There are more of us.
Democracy is our answer.”
Meanwhile, Pavlos Polakis threatens Stefanos Kasselakis with revelations, while the extraordinary meeting of the Political Secretariat of SYRIZA is underway.
The MP for Chania Pavlakis, according to reports, returns to the issue of 26 off shore left to imply in interviews that has managed Mr. Kasselakis until 2022 and speaks of evidence, which shows a mismatch of the issue of the background of Stefanos Kasselakis with reality.
Commenting on the information released, the Kasselakis side noted that this is not new information and that the former SYRIZA chairman has withdrawn from all companies in which he participated.
It is noted that Socrates Famellos, speaking to Mega, noted that “transparency in politics is a very critical issue.”