It appears that Charilaou Trikoupis has decided to open the “Ab>About and Found” section, with Nikos Androulakis preparing for a transcript that claims the award of political cubist of the decade.

The Theodora Tzakri, having completed her 13-year “revolutionary” wanderings in the lairs of Syriza and the Kasselakis vice-presidency of the Kasselakis party, is packing her bags for her old… home.

Nikos Androulakis, in a fit of political realism (or is it despair?), believes that the return of the “prodigal daughter” will unlock Pella for him.

On the other hand, Ms. Tzakri, as a seasoned player of political survival, is looking for a safe harbor for the next Parliament. But the problem is that this “marriage” stumbles on the PASOK president’s own promises of “renewal“.

Do you remember the famous “cutter” of 20 years; That moral incompatibility that Androulakis instituted to send to the conservatives historical cadres like Charis Kastanidis in the name of “freshness”? Well, it seems that the authorities are like tires: they stretch as much as necessary.

With 22 years on the bench, Mrs. Tzakri should normally be looking at the ballot with a binoculars. But the Harilaou Trikoupis “conclave” seems to have revealed a creative accounting that would be the envy of anyone.

The argument? Tzakri not only completed 20 years in PASOK, but took a “break” in SYRIZA. So, time resets, the counter resets, and the “renewal” is baptized a return to the old ways. If Mr. Androulakis had interpreted the laws of physics in the same way, he would have abolished gravity.

The most interesting thing, of course, is not this acrobatics, but political dignity. Nikos Androulakis appears ready to welcome with open arms a politician who for years has fired “poisonous” arrows against PASOK and himself personally. It seems that in the party’s new strategy, his insults of yesterday are overdone in the face of the need for a few votes in Pella.

After Nikolas Farantouris, the addition of Kasselakis’ vice-chairman to the “green” dynamic completes the puzzle of an opposition that resembles more a recycling of cadres than a new power proposal.

Androulakis, who once evangelized the “new”, ends up collecting the ashes of Koumoundourou, proving that his cutter was just a convenient guillotine for his intra-party rivals and not a start for the future.