November 1989 Greek parliamentary election|
|
|
|   | 
First party | 
Second party | 
Third party |  
|   | 
 | 
 | 
 |  
| Leader | 
Konstantinos Mitsotakis | 
Andreas Papandreou | 
Charilaos Florakis |  
| Party | 
ND | 
PASOK | 
Synaspismos |  
| Last election | 
44.28%, 145 seats | 
39.13%, 125 seats | 
13.13%, 28 seats |  
| Seats won | 
148 | 
128 | 
21 |  
| Seat change | 
 3 | 
 3 | 
 7 |  
| Popular vote | 
3,093,055 | 
2,723,739 | 
734,552 |  
| Percentage | 
46.19% | 
40.67% | 
10.97% |  
| Swing | 
1.91 pp | 
1.55 pp | 
2.16 pp |  
  |  
|   | 
Fourth party | 
Fifth party | 
Sixth party |  
|   | 
 | 
 | 
 |  
| Leader | 
Dimitris Chatzhpanagiotou | 
Sadik Achmet | 
Achmet Faikoglu |  
| Party | 
OE | 
Trust | 
Fate |  
| Last election | 
– | 
0.38%, 1 seat | 
0.14%, 0 seats |  
| Seats won | 
1 | 
1 | 
1 |  
| Seat change | 
New | 
 | 
 1 |  
| Popular vote | 
39,130 | 
26,012 | 
10,971 |  
| Percentage | 
0.58% | 
0.39% | 
0.16% |  
| Swing | 
New | 
0.01 pp | 
0.04 pp |  
 
  | 
 
 | 
Early parliamentary elections were held in Greece on 5 November 1989. The liberal-conservative New Democracy party of Konstantinos Mitsotakis emerged as the largest party in Parliament, defeating PASOK of Andreas Papandreou.  However, as in June 1989, Mitsotakis was unable to form a government since his party had failed to win a majority of seats. A National Unity government was formed under Xenophon Zolotas (a retired banker at the age of 85) as a way out of the deadlock and to restore public trust in political institutions after the recent indictments of Papandreou and four of his ministers for the Koskotas scandal.