CBS/AP/ June 19, 2012, 6:07 AM

Greece party leaders hopeful of nailing down coalition government "within hours"

Leader of the New Democracy conservative party Antonis Samaras, right, welcomes Democratic Left party leader Fotis Kouvelis prior their meeting at the Greek parliament, in Athens, June 18, 2012.

Leader of the New Democracy conservative party Antonis Samaras, right, welcomes Democratic Left party leader Fotis Kouvelis prior their meeting at the Greek parliament, in Athens, June 18, 2012. / AP

(CBS/AP) ATHENS, Greece - Rival Greek party leaders launched a second day of talks on Tuesday in an attempt to quickly form a coalition government, after the debt-crippled country's second inconclusive election in six weeks.

Antonis Samaras' New Democracy party came first in Sunday's vote, winning 129 of Parliament's 300 seats — not enough for him to govern alone. He is seeking an alliance with the third-placed Socialist PASOK and the smaller Democratic Left party. New Democracy and PASOK took part in a 6-month coalition government earlier this year.

PASOK leader Evangelos Venizelos met Tuesday with Democratic Left head Fotis Kouvelis, who told reporters afterward that a deal could potentially be achieved "within hours."

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President Obama, meanwhile, was at an economic summit in Mexico trying to land assurances that Europe is closing in on a financial crisis response that will calm the markets and keep the continent's woes from undermining the world.

Obama, as leader of the giant but struggling U.S. economy, remains central to the Group of 20 summit talks wrapping up Tuesday in this coastal resort region. But it is the European members gathered there, led by Germany and its chancellor, Angela Merkel, who carry both the power and responsibility to stabilize a eurozone reeling from debt, banking and political problems.

Obama sent some upbeat signals Monday amid a sense of global relief that Greece would not likely renege on its bailout terms and ditch the euro currency. Obama left a meeting with Merkel feeling "encouraged" about Europe's direction, a spokesman said, as an even more consequential European summit on the crisis approaches in Brussels. (Click player at left to see Obama speak on euro crisis)

Kouvelis said the Greek parties first had to agree on a policy platform, and on who would be appointed to the cabinet.

"The country must have a government," he said.

Venizelos, who has pressed for an agreement by Tuesday night, said he was confident a deal could be reached.

"I am confident after my meeting with Mr. Kouvelis, our views are very close," he said.

Both the conservatives and PASOK have pledged to respect the commitments for further austerity and reforms that Greece undertook as conditions for two massive international bailouts. The Democratic Left is anti-austerity in principle, but wavering. Leaders of New Democracy have said they will seek to renegotiate the terms of the bailout deal with their European neighbors and the International Monetary fund.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said Monday the substance of Greece's austerity and economic reform program was non-negotiable, but the timing of its deficit reduction goals might be adjusted, according to the Reuters news agency.

"We're ready to talk about the timeframe as we can't ignore the lost weeks and we don't want people to suffer because of that," Westerwelle told a radio program.

A German government spokesman, however, told Reuters now was not the time to give Greece "a discount".

However, Deputy Finance Minister Steffen Kampeter, told a German television station it was "clear to us that Greece should not be over-strained," according to Reuters.

It is unclear what points of the bailout agreement a new Greek coalition will seek to renegotiate with Europe and the IMF.

In order to pass most laws, a government needs a simple majority of 151 seats. But to have any chance of success, it would require considerably more than that, especially amid the social turmoil of the past two-and-a-half years of harsh austerity in Greece.

Together with PASOK and the Democratic Left, Samaras' party would have 179 legislators, enjoying a strong majority of 28 seats. The second-placed, anti-bailout Syriza radical left party has refused to join in a coalition.

Samaras' three-day mandate to form a government expires on Wednesday. If it fails, Syriza would get a chance to form a government, followed by the Socialists. But Syriza leader Alexis Tsipras has said he will not even try to create a government. Venizelos has advocated circumventing the mandate process and proceeding straight to a meeting of party leaders under President Karolos Papoulias.

Venizelos has insisted that Syriza should participate in any coalition government, in what appears more an attempt to show the left-wing party up as intransigent rather than a realistic effort to drag it into governance.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
4 Comments Add a Comment
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baileycccc says:
Anyone elected in Greece is incompetent to run a government. It is a basket case country.
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55minus5 says:
There's no political solution to an economic crisis, especially of this scale. They can vote as much as they want to, nothing will improve.
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Spankybulldog says:
The Greeks are the Titanic the euro will crash ... theses guys are paying the fiddle and trying to bail out Spain, Ireland, Greece Italy and Portugal is like trying to bail water out of the Titanic with a bucket. The

German people should take a look back in history and remember another time ... they should have stopped their government.

Germany and France benefited the most from the inflated value of the Euro. Europe has bigger problems than the leaves on the tree with the Euro. In The Plot to Overthrow by a fellow named Mohammad Goldstein he lays out the big picture on the horizon. Obama, senators and every congressman has a hard copy and you can get it for nothing on the net. This American movement will slap the silly out of your politics.
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Lerianis4 replies:
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Agreed on Germany and France benefiting more from the Euro than anyone else.
Bottom line is that German current trends are made on the backs of other countries.