Ruling New Democracy (ND) continues to hold the lead over its political rivals on voter intention, according to a poll carried out by GPO for news site Parapolitika.
In detail, the conservative party registers 24.4%, slightly down from the previous month, with centrist PASOK following with 13.2%, gaining about one percentage point. The populist party Hellenic Solution came in third with 9.9%, followed by Course of Freedom with 7.5% and the Communist Party of Greece with 7.5%.
When extrapolated to valid ballots, the standing of the parties is New Democracy: 28.6%, PASOK: 15.4%, Hellenic Solution: 11.5%, Communist Party of Greece: 8.8%, Course of Freedom: 8.8%, and SYRIZA: 5.4%.
The poll highlights growing dissatisfaction with the government, with 71.6% of respondents saying they want a change in the country’s leadership, while respondents believe the opposition has so far failed to capitalize on this discontent, leaving a significant political gap.
The survey comes amid heightened skepticism toward the government’s record, while speculation about the next political moves by former prime ministers Alexis Tsipras and Antonis Samaras from SYRIZA and ND, respectively, and how their moves are reshaping the landscape across the center-left and beyond.
A total of 57.1% of respondents believe the situation in the country has worsened during the six years of rule by Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and New Democracy, while 25.2% see an improvement—mostly among ND voters.
Similarly, 71.6% of respondents want a change of government, compared to 26.4% who prefer continuity.
Public opinion remains split on what the next government should look like: 44.8% favor a coalition, while 49.8% prefer a single-party majority, even if that requires repeat elections. ND voters strongly back single-party governments, while opposition voters lean toward a coalition led by a figure of broader consensus rather than the leader of the largest party.