Posted on August 29, 2019

Italian Parties Strike Deal for New Government in Blow to Salvini

Bianca Britton and Livia Borghese, CNN, August 29, 2019

Italy’s anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) and the center-left opposition Democratic Party (PD) agreed on Wednesday to form a new coalition government and avoid snap elections which could favor Matteo Salvini’s far-right League Party.

The two parties entered coalition talks, despite being political enemies, after Italy’s former ruling alliance — made up of M5S and the League Party — collapsed following months of infighting.

Hoping to seize on his rise in popularity, Salvini pushed for new elections in recent months, saying that the alliance between his hardline League and the Five Star Movement no longer held a parliamentary majority.

However, Salvini’s plan inevitably backfired as he was sidelined from the ruling alliance by the M5S and PD on Wednesday night.

Nicola Zingaretti, the head of PD, said Wednesday that the coalition is a “real turning point” for Italy and stressed that it was “not just a handover of power.”

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M5S and PD leaders told Italy’s President Sergio Mattarella that Giuseppe Conte should lead the new government once again. Conte had resigned as prime minister last week, effectively averting a no-confidence vote tabled by Salvini.

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Matteo Salvini hoped to seize on his rise in popularity and pushed for new elections in recent months, but it ultimately backfired.

“The only thing that unites them (M5S and PD) is their hatred of the League,” Salvini said bitterly as he addressed reporters on Wednesday evening.

“The truth is that 60 million Italians are being held hostage by 100 parliamentarians who are dead scared of losing their seats.”

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In a speech last week, Conte slammed Salvini for what he described as a lack of statesmanship, and said his decision to force a vote could bring about institutional and financial uncertainty.

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Salvini took the microphone immediately after Conte finished his speech in the Senate, saying that he would “do what I did all over again,” adding: “I am a free man. I am not afraid of the judgment of Italians.”

He said he wanted to offer Italians a “future of growth and prosperity.”

Salvini also defended his policies on Europe and immigration, which caused the coalition to fall apart. “Are we or are we not a sovereign country, free to protect its borders, its beaches!” he said.

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Conte, a law professor who had never held political office prior to his appointment, became prime minister in June 2018, the compromise choice to lead a populist coalition government between the League and Five Star Movement, whose leaders campaigned on anti-immigrant and euroskeptic platforms in their push to power.

While Conte nominally held the most powerful office in Italy, the driving forces in his administration have been the leaders of those two parties that secured the most votes in the March 2018 election. {snip}

Those disputes reached fever pitch last week, as the two parties engaged in a bitter political standoff over a migrant ship that was stranded off Italy for 19 days.

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