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Riot police run through flames as anti-austerity protesters throw fire bombs during clashes in Athens on Wednesday. Lawmakers considered a raft of consumer tax increases and pension reforms.
Riot police run through flames as anti-austerity protesters throw fire bombs during clashes in Athens on Wednesday. Lawmakers considered a raft of consumer tax increases and pension reforms.
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ATHENS — Greek lawmakers voted overwhelmingly early Thursday to approve a harsh austerity bill demanded by bailout creditors, despite significant dissent from members of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ left-wing party.

The bill, which imposes sweeping tax hikes and spending cuts, fueled anger in the governing Syriza party and led to a revolt against Tsipras, who has insisted the deal forged after a marathon weekend eurozone summit was the best he could do to prevent Greece from catastrophically crashing out of Europe’s joint currency.

The bill was approved with 229 votes in favor, 64 against and six abstentions — and won the support of three pro-Europe opposition parties.

Prominent Syriza party members were among the 38 dissenters, including Energy Minister Panagiotis Lafazanis and former finance minister Yanis Varoufakis, whom many blame for exacerbating tensions with Greece’s creditors with his abrasive style during five months of tortured negotiations.

The vote came after an anti-austerity demonstration by about 12,000 protesters outside Parliament degenerated into violence as the debate was getting underway Wednesday night. Riot police battled youths who hurled petrol bombs for about an hour before the clashes died down.

The bill was the first step Greece must take to begin negotiations with creditors on a new bailout — its third in five years — of about $93 billion of loans over three years.

Dissenters argued that Greeks could not face any further cuts after six years of recession that saw poverty and unemployment skyrocket and wiped out a quarter of the country’s economy.

Tsipras has been battling all week to persuade party hard-liners to back the deal. He has acknowledged the agreement reached with creditors was far from what he wanted and trampled on his pre-election promises of repealing austerity but insisted the alternative would have been far worse.

“We had a very specific choice: a deal we largely disagreed with or a chaotic default,” he told Parliament before the vote.

Tsipras had urged Syriza members to back the bill despite having urged voters to reject earlier, milder creditor demands in a July 5 referendum.

Greeks voted overwhelmingly to reject those proposals.

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