Yorgos Karahalis/Reuters
By LIZ ALDERMAN
Multimedia
Some do, and they are left alone. But the action quickly picks up, as
the men, wearing black T-shirts with the party’s name, destroy a stall
with clubs and scatter the merchandise. “We saw a few illegal immigrants
selling their wares,” Mr. Germenis says in the video. “We did what
Golden Dawn has to do. And now we’re going to church to pay our respects
to the Madonna.”
Just a few months ago, the name Golden Dawn was something to be whispered in Greece.
But three months after the extremist right-wing group won an electoral foothold in Parliament, talk of Golden Dawn seems to be on everybody’s lips.
In cafes, taxis and bars, Greeks across the political spectrum are
discussing the palpable surge in Golden Dawn’s popularity, which has
risen in recent political polls even as the group steps up a campaign of
vigilantism and attacks against immigrants.
The poll gains come amid growing disenchantment over rising illegal immigration, and with the government of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras,
which is being forced by its international lenders to push through $15
billion in additional, highly unpopular, austerity measures. If Greece
were to hold new elections soon, Golden Dawn could emerge as the
third-largest party in Parliament, behind Mr. Samaras’s New Democracy
and the left-wing Syriza. Currently, Golden Dawn is the fifth largest,
with 18 out of 300 seats.
“We have a major socioeconomic crisis in which several hundred thousand
Greeks are losing ground,” said Nikos Demertzis, a professor of
political sociology at the University of Athens. “And you have a rising
number of immigrants in Greece, many illegal. This is creating a
volcanic situation where all the classic parameters for the flourishing
of a far-right force like Golden Dawn are present.”
Golden Dawn’s tactics are similar to ones it used before parliamentary elections in June. Preying on fears that immigrants are worsening crime rates and economic hardship,
the group has been stepping up attacks against immigrants, many of whom
are legal citizens, with the police frequently standing by. It is also
trying to expand its reach with the Greek diaspora.
The group recently opened an office in New York, announcing its presence with a sleek Web site
depicting a stylized Swastika against a darkened Manhattan skyline. The
Web site was disabled by hackers less than a day later and remains
down, and the American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association condemned the group’s outreach, saying that “fascism has no place in the United States.”
Golden Dawn has also established an outpost in Australia, where Greeks
have been emigrating by the thousands to escape the crisis in their
homeland.
The group is still far from being a major threat to Mr. Samaras’s party,
or to his fragile three-party coalition government. Most Greeks express
alarm at the group’s rise, and anti-fascist organizations in Athens are
continuing efforts neighborhood by neighborhood to counter its
increased vigilantism.
Yet, rising political and social discontent is rich fodder for Golden
Dawn as it tries to cultivate a larger base. These days, it is not
uncommon for conversations to evolve into laments about the
ineffectiveness of Mr. Samaras’s government, before a mention of Golden
Dawn’s rise in the polls slips in.
“People have no faith in the political system,” said Dimitris
Kaklamanos, 41, a worker at a Shell gas station in the town of Piraeus,
on the outskirts of Athens.
Mr. Kaklamanos said he had long voted for Pasok, the Socialist party,
but grew disillusioned with corruption and the ineptitude of its
politicians. Now, he feels attracted to Golden Dawn, he said, whose
popularity he expects to continue to rise, especially as the group
replaces police and government services in poor areas where the state
has almost ceased to function.
Other political parties “know that Golden Dawn is gaining power and they
see that as a threat,” Mr. Kaklamanos said. “But Golden Dawn are the
only ones out there demonstrating they care about the Greek people.”
He cited food and clothing drives conducted by the group across a
widening area of Athens, as well as protections it extends to vulnerable
Greeks in neighborhoods where crime has surged in tandem with illegal
immigration.
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