A technical political analysis of Alexis Tsipras‘s speech at the Pallas, which he has carried out with the help of artificial intelligence tools, is presented on his Facebook profile by Former Vice President of Strategy at Viva Wallet, Giannis Larios.
As Larios explains, he imported the Tsipras speech in its entirety into a custom language model he created on ChatGPT, attempting to reveal the deeper references and thinking of the former prime minister. In its reports, the AI platform describes the speech as an “Idealized Approach” to Populism, while also comparing it to similar speeches by Donald Trump, identifying similarities.
In detail, the post by Yannis Larios
The Anatomy of Tsipras’ speech at the Palace – a technical political analysis from artificial intelligence tools
I have imported the Tsipras speech as it is into a custom language model I have created in ChatGPT, in order to track the political directions and depth of the language of politics and politicians, beyond and behind the simple slogans, and the superficial stuff that journalists usually write (who went, what they saw, etc.). If you sort out the speeches from the “shallow parapolitics” and day-to-day issues (which are not “shallow” at all…), you can more easily uncover the deeper meanings of politicians and the way they think. So I asked the machine to technically analyse its content for me, and identify the references on which Tsipras’ philosophy is based. Here’s what it answered – the second part (with reference to the similarities to Trump’s speeches) was a surprise!
Announcement of Tsipras’ speech at the Palace
Tsipras’ speech at Pallas is a classic example of the “Ideational Approach” of Populism. According to political scientist Cas Mudde, populism is defined as a “thin-centered ideology” that holds that society is ultimately divided into two homogeneous and competing groups: the “pure people” and the “corrupt elite.”
The “pure and righteous people” and the “corrupted elite”.
Here are the parts of the speech that confirm this connection:
1. The Manichean Division: Morality vs. Immorality
Theory: Mudde explains that the distinction between “people” and “elite” is not merely political or class-based, but primarily moral (“pure” vs. “corrupt”). Populists claim to represent *exclusively* the moral right.
In this context, Alexis Tsipras defines himself and identifies his government (2015-2019) as “the most honest government in the modern political history of the country”. He contrasts this “purity” with his opponents (“current power”), to whom he attributes “hypocrisy”, “lies” and “generalized corruption” He accuses them not just of mismanagement, but of moral degradation (“arrogance”, “stench”, “swamp breath”).
2. Anti-pluralism and delegitimization of the adversary
Professor Jan-Werner Müller (Princeton University), in his book “What is Populism?”, defines anti-pluralism as a key feature of populism. Populists do not accept that their political opponents are legitimate competitors but consider them enemies of the people.
Application to Speech: The key phrase that affirms Müller is: “We don’t have a wrong government. We have a wrong government” . This is not a criticism of policy choices, but a questioning of the very legitimacy of the government’s existence.
He describes the current system of government as a “regime” that has led to “paralysis of the rule of law” and “disqualification of the judiciary” , thus stripping its opponents of all institutional authority.
3. The invocation of the “general will” (Volonté Générale)
According to Mudde, populists argue that politics should be the expression of the volonté générale (general will) of the people, which they themselves intuit and express authentically, often bypassing institutions.
Application to Speech: Tsipras presents himself as the spokesman for a “silent majority” that is suffocating (“Greek society is suffocating”).
He argues that history “is not a monopoly of those who consider themselves victorious” , implying that the real popular will has been trampled on by the elite and that he is coming to restore “historical truth”.
“The Greek people are a ‘civilized population”.
4. Dramatization and Invocation of Crisis
The literature (e.g., Moffitt) states that populists often “perform” (perform) a crisis or disaster situation to justify the need for an immediate, radical solution and redemptive leadership.
Application to Speech: The language used is revelatory: “humanitarian tragedy”, “looting”, “social disintegration”, “sunk in shame”. It describes the country as being in “utterly uncharted and dangerous waters”, creating a sense of urgency that requires a “political Big Bang” to save it.
Overall, the speech closely follows the structure outlined in academic textbooks on populism: It constructs a virtuous “We” (the people/the truth party) against an immoral “They” (the elite/swamp), and proposes a break with institutions (Big Bang) as the only solution to restore popular sovereignty.
The Paradoxical Similarities to MAGA/Trump-style Rhetoric:
Although the ideological starting points are opposed (Left vs. Right), the rhetorical devices used by Alexis Tsipras in this speech strikingly mirror the strategies found in Donald Trump’s MAGA movement, particularly in the way the concept of “enemy” is constructed.
1. Draining the Swamp
The MAGA Standard: Trump based his campaign on the slogan “Drain the Swamp”, characterizing the Washington establishment as a murky, stagnant, and corrupt ecosystem (“a Swamp”) that operates solely for itself.
The Tsipras Approach: The former Prime Minister explicitly and repeatedly uses the word “swamp”. He exclaims, “Back to the swamp!” He repeats, “Back to the swamp!” and speaks of “swamp politics” that produces “swamp apathy”. The metaphor is identical: the existing regime is described as a stagnant, polluted environment trapping the country, from which only he can free it by leading it to “clean seas.”
2. The “Deep State” and the Institutional Conspiracy
The MAGA Model: Trump frequently attacks the so-called “Deep State” (judiciary, media, intelligence agencies), accusing it of conspiring against himself and the people.
The Tsipras Approach: The speaker attacks “organized interests” and “known circles of power” that “abuse the truth”. He states that history is not a “monopoly” of the victors, implying a systemic attempt to falsify memory and persecute his legacy by an invisible, powerful power grid.
3. The striking similarity – Messianism and the “Return.”
The MAGA Model: Trump presents himself as the only one who can fix the system (“I alone can fix it”) and often bypasses his party structures to appeal directly to the grassroots.
The Tsipras Approach: He presents himself as the experienced captain who has already reached “Ithaca” once and is ready for a new journey. He separates his position from the “inert bureaucracies” of his own party and declares that in the new movement, “we will not have a reserve in the first place for anyone.”
This is a classic populist strategy: the leader positions himself above parties, former and current collaborators and apparatuses, as the sole authentic spokesman for the popular will.
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