Greek election looms as parties struggle to form government

1People walk past the Greek parliament in Athens, on Friday, Aug. 21, 2015.
2Greece's president asked the main opposition party Friday to try to form a new government, a day after Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras resigned and called an early election next month to deal with a governing party rebellion over Greece's third bailout deal.
3People walk past the Greek parliament in Athens, on Friday, Aug....
4Conservative New Democracy party head Evangelos Meimarakis answers questions to journalist after his meeting with Greek President in Athens, Friday Aug. 21, 2015.
5Greece's president on Friday asked opposition leaders to try to form a new government, a day after Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras resigned and called an early election next month to deal with a governing party rebellion over Greece's third bailout deal.
6Conservative New Democracy party head Evangelos Meimarakis answers...
7Outgoing Greek Prime minister Alexis Tsipras arrives at the headquarters in Athens, on Friday, Aug. 21, 2015.
8Outgoing Greek Prime minister Alexis Tsipras arrives at the...
9Conservative New Democracy party head Evangelos Meimarakis, center, leaves the presidential Palace after a meeting with Greek President in Athens, Friday Aug. 21, 2015.
10Conservative New Democracy party head Evangelos Meimarakis, center,...
11A Greek elderly man passes a street in Athens, on Friday, Aug. 21, 2015.
12A Greek elderly man passes a street in Athens, on Friday, Aug. 21,...
13Former energy minister Panagiotis Lafazanis announces the formation of a new hardline left wing party called Popular Unity which he will lead, in Athens, on Friday, Aug. 21, 2015.
14His party, formed by the 25 lawmakers who split from the majority radical left Syriza Friday, is now the third-largest in Greece's parliament.
15Former energy minister Panagiotis Lafazanis announces the formation...
16Former Energy Minister Panagiotis Lafazanis announces the formation of a new hardline left wing party called Popular Unity which he will lead, during press conference in Athens, on Friday, Aug. 21, 2015.
17ATHENS, Greece (AP) - Greece's main opposition party launched efforts to form a new government Friday following Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras' resignation, but made no progress in what appears a doomed task - which will pave the way for another potentially destabilizing election.
18Tsipras resigned late Thursday and called an early election next month to deal with a rebellion in his radical left Syriza party over the terms of Greece's new bailout deal.
19Although no date has been set, outgoing government spokeswoman Olga Gerovassili said Friday she expects Greeks will go to the polls on Sept.
20The opposition has few chances of uniting and forming a government, meaning that after more than five years of a worsening financial crisis, Greece is headed for its fifth national election in six years.
21Tsipras is widely tipped to win the vote, though if he fails to secure an outright majority he could have to seek a new coalition.
22His decision to call a vote so early - just hours after Greece started tapping loans from its 86 billion euro ($95 billion) rescue program - amounts to a bet that he can regain power with a new government that would not be hobbled by internal dissent.
23The rebels announced Friday they were splitting to form their own anti-austerity movement.
24They want to scrap the bailout altogether, arguing that the budget savings and reforms Tsipras agreed to for the bailout Iare exactly what they had vowed to fight when they came to power with Syriza in January.
25About one in four Syriza lawmakers refused to back the bailout's ratification in parliament last week, which was only approved with backing from opposition parties.
26Faced with such dissent, it became only a matter of time before Tsipras called an election or confidence vote to confirm his mandate to implement the bailout reforms.
27It will be the third time this year that Greeks vote, after January elections and a July 5 referendum on reforms that creditors were proposing during bailout negotiations.
28Some analysts are concerned that the election could delay reforms needed to get rescue loans, which are only disbursed after quarterly reviews.
29"A September election would occur before the first program review in October and may well hamper and delay the technical work and political decisions necessary for its completion," said the Fitch ratings agency.
30"The likely pause in legislating for reforms during the election campaign coming so soon after the agreement was concluded may rekindle or reinforce some creditors' concerns about Greece's ability to meet the program's requirements," Fitch said.
31So far, Greece's European creditors seemed sanguine about the election, which had been widely expected.
32"The step by Prime Minister Tsipras isn't surprising" considering he has lost his majority in parliament, said Steffen Seibert, spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
33He noted that the bailout deal was signed with Greece, and not just the current government, meaning it should be implemented by whoever emerges victorious from the election.
34Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutchman who heads eurozone finance ministers meetings, said he hoped the elections would not slow down Greece's reforms.
35"There is a very broad majority in the Greek parliament at the moment that supports the (bailout) package and the expectation is that that could even get stronger," he told reporters.
36In Brussels, European Commission spokeswoman Annika Breidthardt said the EU executive body was confident the bailout program would be implemented.
37The political uncertainty nevertheless took its toll on Greece's stock market, with the main stock index closing down 2.5 percent, a day after losing 3.5 percent on election speculation.
38On Friday, President Prokopis Pavlopoulos met conservative New Democracy party head Evangelos Meimarakis and asked him to try to form a government.
39Meimarakis later met with the head of the small centrist Potami party, Stavros Theodorakis, who said the best way forward for Greece was to hold elections as soon as possible.
40"The way things are now ... we believe it is impossible for this parliament to produce a government," Theodorakis said after the meeting.
41Meimarakis has three days to seek coalition partners, after which the mandate would be given to the third-largest party in Parliament for a further three days.
42The third-largest party is now the new movement formed by the 25 lawmakers who split from Syriza Friday.
43The group, named Popular Unity, will be led by former energy minister Panagiotis Lafazanis.
44If, as expected, neither attempt bears fruit, parliament will be dissolved and a caretaker government appointed to lead the country to early elections within a month.