<P> Apart from the economic crisis, there is also a developing political crisis in the country . The European Commission asked the major parties in Greece to come to an agreement in regards to the new set of austerity measures, but twice the major parties failed . In a poll published on 29 May 2011, the two major parties (the ruling Panhellenic Socialist Movement and the main opposition New Democracy) gathered slightly under 40% of the total number of votes, with the ruling party having 19%, while the opposition came first with 19.5% . In another poll published the same day, the ruling party came first with 20.7% while the opposition came second with 20.4% . According to the polls, neither of the two parties could form a government, even if they combined forces . The lack of co-ordination within the government (with conflicting government officials stating opposite' government positions') also fuelled the protests . When Maria Damanaki, European Commissioner for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, stated that "our withdrawal from the Eurozone is on the table, we have to speak frankly" on 25 May, Greek banks lost liquidity equal to 1.5 billion Euro from withdrawals in two days . Meanwhile, the Minister of Finance, Giorgos Papakonstantinou, vehemently denied that exiting the Eurozone is being considered . On 1 June, the leader of the Popular Orthodox Rally party, Georgios Karatzaferis, announced that his party is considering resigning from parliament, thus causing the dissolution of the Hellenic Parliament and triggering national elections . He also commented that "I see a Prime Minister that is unable to react, an opposition that is unwilling to play the game, and a Left that is in its own little world". </P> <P> On 23 February 2011, there was a recurrence of violent protests and strikes, involving up to 100,000 people as German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for a renewal of the loan programme to Greece that had been conditioned on fiscal tightening . The measures adopted by Greece were considered harsh by the protesters . </P> <P> As of 25 May 2011, there is a peaceful demonstration in Athens and other major cities, protesting the new austerity measures proposed by the government, in the same spirit as the 2011 Spanish protests . The demonstrations include most major Greek cities: Athens, Thessaloniki, Larissa, Patras, Volos, Rethymno, Tripoli and Kalamata . The demonstration in Athens is coordinated by the Facebook page "Αγανακτισμένοι Στο Σύνταγμα" (Indignants at Syntagma). Currently, it is reported that over 90,000 people have registered on the page, and thousands (reportedly over 30,000) have gathered outside the Greek Parliament in Syntagma square . The demonstration in Greece's second - largest city, Thessaloniki, is co-ordinated by the Facebook page "Αγανακτισμένοι στον Λευκό Πύργο" (Indignants at the White Tower), and over 35,000 people have said they would' attend' the protest . Some of the most popular slogans at protest on 25 May were: </P> <Ul> <Li> Error 404, Democracy was not found . </Li> <Li> I vote, You vote, He votes, She votes, We vote, You vote, They steal . </Li> <Li> Greece your turn has come, you have to stop burying your children . </Li> <Li> Oust! (Greek interjection of a negative nature, meaning "leave") </Li> <Li> The maid resisted . What do we do? (Reference to an alleged sex scandal involving former IMF director Dominique Strauss - Kahn) </Li> </Ul>

Which of the following outcomes occurred in greece as a response to these bailouts