Greece narrowly approves scheme to cut public sector jobs

Protesters throng gates of parliament as reform bill facilitating public job cuts passes vote

Municipal public school guard Yiorgos Avramidis (43) married with two children, from the northern Greek town of Edessa, sits in front of a police line guarding the Greek parliament in Athens, as Greece’s coalition government voted for a bill to cut public sector jobs. The bill includes deeply divisive plans for a transfer and layoff scheme for 25,000 public workers - mainly teachers and municipal police - that had triggered a week of almost daily marches, rallies and strikes in protest. Mr Avramidis is one of the more than 2,000 public school guards that lost their jobs. Photograph: Yannis Behrakis/Reuters
Municipal public school guard Yiorgos Avramidis (43) married with two children, from the northern Greek town of Edessa, sits in front of a police line guarding the Greek parliament in Athens, as Greece’s coalition government voted for a bill to cut public sector jobs. The bill includes deeply divisive plans for a transfer and layoff scheme for 25,000 public workers - mainly teachers and municipal police - that had triggered a week of almost daily marches, rallies and strikes in protest. Mr Avramidis is one of the more than 2,000 public school guards that lost their jobs. Photograph: Yannis Behrakis/Reuters

The Greek parliament last night narrowly approved a vote to sack public sector workers as thousands chanting anti-austerity slogans protested outside parliament.

The vote was the first major test for prime minister Antonis Samaras’s two-party coalition since losing an ally over the abrupt shutdown of the state broadcaster last month, which left it with a scant five-seat majority in the 300-seat parliament.

After midnight last night, 153 politicians out of the 293 present voted in favour of the bill, whose passage was required to unlock nearly €7 billion in aid from European Union and International Monetary Fund lenders.

The bill includes deeply divisive plans for a transfer and layoff scheme for 25,000 public workers - mainly teachers and municipal police - that had triggered a week of almost daily marches, rallies and strikes in protest.

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About 5,000 Greeks thronged the street outside parliament as the vote neared, with some chanting: “We will not succumb, the only option is to resist” and holding aloft black balloons - though turnout was much smaller than in protests last year.

“After 12 years on the job, they fire us in one night,” Patra Hatziharalampous, a 52-year-old school guard in uniform said between sobs. “If they have any guts, they should say no to the bailout and take some of the bill’s articles back.”

The reforms were passed hours before German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble - Europe's leading proponent of austerity blamed by many Greeks for their woes - arrives in Athens for his first visit to Greece since the debt crisis began in 2009.

Before the vote, Mr Samaras announced Greece’s first tax cut since its crisis began nearly four years ago, in a bid to placate protests and an increasingly restive public mood.

“We will not relax,” Me Samaras said in a surprise television address to announce that value-added tax (VAT) in restaurants would be cut to 13 per cent from 23 per cent starting August 1st.

“We will continue climbing up the hill, we will reach the top, which is not far, and better days will come for our people.”

In a clip that became an instant hit on social media site Twitter, television stations accidentally showed Mr Samaras fumbling at an initial attempt to read the statement and swearing “Damn my head, ******” as he walked off the podium.

‘Drawing blood’

The government had made a show of arguing for the restaurant VAT cut during its latest talks with lenders, and analysts said the move was a symbolic attempt to show austerity-hit Greeks that there was light at the end of the tunnel.

Mr Samaras said the cut would help curb tax evasion, a major problem in the country and one of the reasons it slid into a debt crisis in 2009, but warned that if evasion persisted VAT would revert to 23 per cent.

"The crucial thing is that it was announced now and not after the summer," said Thomas Gerakis, head of Marc Pollsters. "How it will benefit consumers remains to be seen."

Athens has been limping along on two bailouts worth over €240 billion since 2010, which it has secured at the price of wage cuts and tax rises that have triggered a six-year recession and sent unemployment to 27 per cent.

The latest bill agreed with lenders includes a luxury tax on houses with swimming pools and owners of high performance cars.

But the move that has drawn the most anger is the plan to place 25,000 workers into the layoff scheme by the end of 2013, giving them eight months to find another position or get laid off. Greece’s public sector is widely seen as oversized, inefficient and filled with patronage hires, but many Greeks believe society can no longer go tolerate cuts or tax hikes.

Uniformed municipal police, garbage collectors in orange vests and hundreds of other public sector workers have taken to the streets of Athens almost daily on motorbikes in over a week of protests, blowing whistles, honking horns and blaring sirens.

Reuters