david damion mcginniss is following that for us. was it an even bigger margin than you might have thought. >> well a few said no which wasn't expected. yesterday in the run-up for the vote, 22 mps signaled they would vote no. what's more surprising were not the results, it was more that the debate, german parliament from civilized affairs. which was pretty salacious. there were lots of cat calls, lots of jeering, quite a lot of laughing at the polling, and that's because this extension of the bailout, it might be unpopular in greece, it's already pretty unpopular here in germany. two-thirds of german voters say they don't want the extension of the bailout, and only 20% of the germans say they do. and that's because there's a lot of skepticism here in germany about whether on the one hand athens will push forward the economic reforms promised. and also whether these reforms are only a must even if they do go forward. so it's a very controversial debate, and this is now a stopgap for the next four months, but it's going to carry on af