A new political earthquake is quietly forming in Greece—and this time, it’s not coming from the government, but from within the opposition itself.
A fresh opinion poll reveals a rapidly shifting landscape, where traditional parties are losing ground and new forces are rising. The ruling New Democracy remains in first place, but with noticeable losses, dropping to 25.7%—a sign that cracks are beginning to show in its dominance.
In second place, PASOK holds steady at 13.5%, but the real story lies elsewhere.
A newly formed party led by Maria Karystianou has surged straight into third place with 7.9%—an extraordinary debut that signals growing public demand for something different.
At the same time, established opposition figures are collapsing. Zoe Konstantopoulou sees her party fall sharply, while SYRIZA continues its dramatic decline, polling at just 3.1%, now trailing even smaller parties.
What’s even more telling is the mood of the electorate.
Undecided voters are decreasing, meaning Greeks are no longer waiting—they are choosing. Yet when asked who is fit to govern, nearly as many respondents answered “no one” as those who chose Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.
Even more striking: 56% now support early elections.
This is not stability. This is a system in transition.
The data points to one clear reality: the Greek political landscape is fragmenting. Trust in traditional parties is eroding, new movements are gaining traction, and a large portion of society is openly dissatisfied with the entire political class.
Greece is entering a new political phase—one where nothing should be taken for granted.
