If Italy's Matteo Salvini is curious about what happens when populists promise more than they can deliver, he should look no further than the case of Alexis Tsipras, the Greek iconoclast who vowed to bring down the establishment but then found himself part of it.
For Germany's Angela Merkel, Tsipras is the leader who took his country to the brink of financial ruin and ultimately saw sense. But back home, he caved in to the demands of international creditors for more spending cuts and tax increases. Instead of ending austerity, he enforced it.
In Sunday's parliamentary elections, the Greek prime minister is set to be ejected from office. Eleni Chrepa traveled to the northern town of Florina and with Paul Tugwell reported how the once-unshakable support for his radical left Syriza party has crumbled.
People are fed up. "It's like telling a kid that you will get them an ice cream and ending up giving them nothing, not even chewing gum," says one store owner.
Salvini may be at the opposite side of the ideological spectrum, but the lessons of Tsipras are a reminder that disappointed voters can turn on you.
- Flavia Krause-Jackson
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