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List of members of the Hellenic Parliament, June 2023

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List of members of the Hellenic Parliament, June 2023
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This is a list of the 300 members who were elected to the Hellenic Parliament – for the 20th parliamentary term (Κ΄ in Greek numerals) – in the June 2023 legislative election, held on 25 June 2023.[1]
The "20th parliamentary term" officially began on Monday 3 July 2023 swearing in the oath of members of the Parliament.

Quick facts 20th (K΄)a Plenary Session, Overview ...

In these elections, the voters did not elect the MPs – instead, the order of precedence was determined on the basis of a list drawn up by the parties. However, the parties drew up their lists on the basis of the votes of the MPs in the previous elections in May 2023.[2] Of the 300 MPs (69 of whom are women), 34 have been elected for the first time.

On June 12, 2025, the Special Highest Court officially notified the Parliament of its decision to annul the election of three MPs from the Spartans party, against whom annulment appeals had been filed, on the grounds of misleading voters (the court ruled that Ilias Kasidiaris was the guiding figure behind the party’s candidates, a fact concealed from voters). The three MPs were stripped of their positions without being replaced by alternates, as is customary, since the court determined that the nature of the offense prohibits the allocation of seats to alternate MPs. Thus, for the first time since the Metapolitefsi (post-1974 democratic transition), the Parliament’s Plenary will effectively consist of 297 MPs. [3] The Speaker of the Parliament stated that the majority threshold (Dedilomeni Principle) will not be reduced to reflect the decrease in the number of MPs, but will remain at 151 MPs.

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Composition

More information Initial composition (June 2023), Current composition (As of June 2025[update]) ...
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Members of Parliament by parliamentary group

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New Democracy

More information Constituency, Full name ...

PASOK – Movement for Change

More information Constituency, Full name ...

Syriza

More information Constituency, Full name ...

The party of the major opposition has been plagued by an internal crisis following the election of a new leadership. The new president has not been accepted by all the party's supporters and MPs, and soon after his election begun resignations from those who disagreed with his political leadership.[22] Most of the resigned MPs later formed the New Left party.
In November 2024, during new internal party elections, there was a new withdrawal of MPs which led to the second split of the party.[23]
On 21 November 2024, due to the large amount of Syriza members leaving the party, it no longer was the 2nd most represented party. Thus, it lost the position of the official opposition, which went to PASOK.

Communist Party of Greece

More information Constituency, Full name ...

Greek Solution

More information Constituency, Full name ...

New Left

More information Constituency, Full name ...

The parliamentary group was created on 4 December 2023 entirely from the members of Syriza who had resigned and/or left the party; therefore, the party has not been voted by the electorate. As a party it was founded on 1 May 2024.

Niki

More information Constituency, Full name ...

Course of Freedom

More information Constituency, Full name ...

Spartans

The party's parliamentary group was dissolved on June 12, 2025.

More information Constituency, Full name ...

Since August 2023, a prolonged internal party crisis has all but dissolved the Spartiate parliamentary group .[37] The crisis erupted over the support of most of the party's MPs for Ilias Kasidiaris and his candidacy for the Municipality of Athens in the upcoming local elections.[38] Party leader Vasilis Stigkas reacted to these initiatives by his MPs and expelled three of them, referring to MPs led by extra-parliamentary foreign centres acting like the Greek mafia.[39]

Stigkas' allegations prompted a judicial investigation by the Prosecutor of Greece’s Supreme Civil and Criminal Court, leading to the indictment of the entire parliamentary group—except Vasilis Stigkas—for electoral fraud, with Ilias Kasidiaris also charged for instigating the fraud. In May 2025, the Court of Appeal unanimously acquitted all 11 accused MPs, including Kasidiaris, finding no evidence that they had misled voters."[40]
On May 27, the Appeals Prosecutor's Office filed an appeal against the first-instance decision, deeming its reasoning erroneous. [41]

According to a decision by the Supreme Judicial Council, three Spartans MPs were stripped of their office and ceased to be members of the Greek Parliament. This decision was based on the Special Election Court's opinion that these MPs were elected by misleading the electorate, concealing that their true leader and guide was Ilias Kasidiaris. [33] The party's parliamentary group, now consisting of only two members, was dissolved on June 12, 2025, as it fell below the threshold of five MPs required to form a parliamentary group. The two MPs joined the Independents. [42]

Independents

More information Constituency, Full name ...

[43]

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See also

Note

^a The parliamentary terms are numbered in consecutive order from 1975, with Greek numbering.

References

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