Former Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras will unveil his new political movement on May 26 in Athens' Thiseio district, building his comeback around a "digital party" model designed to replace conventional party bureaucracy with a live platform for grassroots mobilization and direct communication between leadership and members.
The launch will reveal the party's name and founding declaration alongside the platform itself, which aides say will go well beyond a standard registration tool — functioning as the primary daily channel between Mr. Tsipras and the base.
The strategy is aimed squarely at younger, tech-oriented voters who have grown alienated from traditional party structures.
Despite the digital emphasis, the movement will maintain conventional governing bodies. Internal sources say it will establish a Political Secretariat for strategic coordination and a Central Committee to be formally titled the "National Council."
The launch comes as Greece's left-wing opposition space remains fragmented following Mr. Tsipras's departure from SYRIZA, the party he led to power in 2015 before losing it to Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis in 2019.
His former party has since fractured, and several competing left-of-centre movements — including the recently launched initiative by activist Maria Karystianou — are competing for the same voter base ahead of the 2027 elections.
Rivals have questioned whether Mr. Tsipras's ideological positioning has shifted significantly enough to justify a new vehicle, or whether the digital format is structural innovation or rebranding.
By Antonis Telopoulos