Antarsya


The Anticapitalist Left Cooperation for the Overthrow, better known domestically by the abbreviation ANTARSYA, is a coalition of radical-left political organisations in Greece.

Foundation

ANTARSYA was founded on 22 March 2009 in Athens by organisations and independent militants with origins in the now-defunct coalitions of the Radical Left Front and the United Anti-Capitalist Left. As a member of the latter, the Trotskyist organization Workers Revolutionary Party objected to the foundation of such a coalition and left ENANTIA.
The Organisation of Internationalist Communists of Greece, a Trotskyist party, participated in the foundation but left after a few weeks, on 18 May 2009, citing objections to what it perceived as the coalition "reformist" focus on parliamentary politics and to the invocation in the foundational document of historical events on which Trotskyists have a very different view.

Members

As of 2023, the coalition's members are the Alternative Ecologists, the Initiative for an Anticapitalist Revolutionary ANTARSYA, the Communist Liberation, the Organization of Communist Internationalists of Greece–Spartacus, the Revolutionary Communist Movement of Greece, the Socialist Workers' Party, and the Youth of Communist Liberation.

Ideology and political platform

ANTARSYA outlines its programmatic priorities around anti-capitalism, workers rights, and social transformation. Its positions are expressed in party congress decisions and official declarations.

Economy, debt and the EU

ANTARSYA advocates for the unilateral cancellation of Greece’s public debt, which it considers illegitimate and unsustainable. It calls for Greece to exit the eurozone and the European Union, arguing that membership prevents any meaningful anti-austerity or anti-capitalist policy. The party also supports nationalisation of banks and major industries under workers’ and popular control, without compensation where mismanagement or layoffs have occurred.

Labour and workers’ rights

The coalition prioritises rebuilding class-based labour and social movements, restoring collective bargaining rights, wages and pensions reduced under austerity, and defending trade union freedoms. It calls for workers’ control in production, including cooperatives and occupations in sectors facing closure or redundancies.

Democracy and sovereignty

ANTARSYA rejects external supervision by the EU, European Central Bank, or International Monetary Fund, and promotes popular sovereignty free from international lenders. It supports radical democratic reforms, expansion of participatory mechanisms, and defends civil liberties against authoritarian legislation.

Environment and ecology

The party places strong emphasis on ecological struggles, linking them to anti-capitalism. It opposes extractivist projects such as large-scale gold mining in northern Greece, calls for the abandonment of fossil fuels, and supports investment in renewable energy under social and community control.

Migration, anti-racism and rights

ANTARSYA supports the rights of migrants and refugees, safe and legal routes, and full social and political rights for all residents. It campaigns against racism, xenophobia and far-right violence, and defends gender equality and LGBTQ rights.
Τhe formation of ANTARSYA is understood to have been in explicit opposition to what the radical left in Greece assessed as the "social reformism" of Syriza and its leadership, which ultimately stood in support of austerity policies.
The coalition also supports a comprehensive banning of layoffs; a minimum salary, currently determined to the amount of 1,400 euros per month; a reduction of working time to 35 hours per week, without reduction in wages; complete disarmament of the Hellenic Police; the granting of full political and social rights to all immigrants; and an eco-socialist response to the ecological crisis.
The coalition describes itself as a "front of the anticapitalist, revolutionary, communist left, and of radical ecology" in Greece. Its major positions are:

Election results

ANTARSYA's participation in the electoral, parliamentary process commenced with the European Parliament elections in June 2009, where the coalition took in 21,951 votes or 0.43% of the total. It participated in the October 4, 2009 general elections, listing candidates in every constituency and obtaining 24,737 votes, or 0.36% of the total.
In the September 2015 Greek parliamentary election, it formed an alliance with the Workers Revolutionary Party.