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Yanis Varoufakis: The ECB is trying to take the judicial road to authoritarianism. Let’s fight back

Summary:
The European Central Bank is demanding from DiEM25 đŸ’¶20,000 for 'legal fees'. All because we dared to ask for information that should be publicly available. We won't allow powerful institutions like the ECB to intimidate us. Sign the petition and donate to help us fight back! Sign this petition: https://internal.diem25.org/en/petitions/86 Donate: https://i.diem25.org/en/donations/to/petition86 MORE INFORMATION In 2015, the European Central Bank (ECB) forced Greece’s banks to close as part of the Troika’s attempt to intimidate the newly-elected Greek government into abandoning what it had been voted in to do: renegotiate the country’s public debt, fiscal policy and reform agenda. We know the ECB commissioned a legal opinion on the legality of those actions. And we want to see that

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The European Central Bank is demanding from DiEM25 đŸ’¶20,000 for 'legal fees'. All because we dared to ask for information that should be publicly available. We won't allow powerful institutions like the ECB to intimidate us. Sign the petition and donate to help us fight back!



Sign this petition: https://internal.diem25.org/en/petitions/86

Donate: https://i.diem25.org/en/donations/to/petition86



MORE INFORMATION



In 2015, the European Central Bank (ECB) forced Greece’s banks to close as part of the Troika’s attempt to intimidate the newly-elected Greek government into abandoning what it had been voted in to do: renegotiate the country’s public debt, fiscal policy and reform agenda.



We know the ECB commissioned a legal opinion on the legality of those actions. And we want to see that opinion, but the ECB refuses to make it public.



The ECB has the exorbitant power to close down a Eurozone country’s banks. Exercising this power with decisions made behind closed doors by unelected officials is inconsistent with European democracy.



The least Europeans can expect is access to legal opinions that they have paid for regarding the exercise of the ECB’s power. In 2017, Yanis Varoufakis (DiEM25 / MeRA25 Greece) – Greece’s finance minister at the time the opinion was commissioned – and then-MEP Fabio de Masi (GUE/NGL), supported by a broad alliance of politicians and academics, filed a mass freedom of information request to the ECB to get this opinion. When they refused to release it on “confidentiality grounds”, we took them to the European courts.



To this day, the ECB hasn’t made that legal opinion public. Not only that – it is now demanding over €20.000 in legal fees from us, as a clear warning to anyone who dares request information that should be accessible to all Europeans in the first place.



We won’t be intimidated: our response is to renew our call for the ECB to release #TheGreekFiles!



By signing our petition, you are helping us put a simple question to the ECB: if you acted legally, why don’t you release the legal opinion regarding your actions?



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Join DiEM25: https://diem25.org/join

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Donate to DiEM25: https://diem25.org/donate



#TheGreekFiles #Greece #ECB
Yanis Varoufakis
An accidental economist Let me begin with a confession: I am a Professor of Economics who has never really trained as an economist. But let’s take things one at a time.

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