Draghi asked to form new Italian coalition government

Draghi asked to form new Italian coalition government

Mario Draghi (R) has agreed to put forward a new administration in the hope of fixing a fractured parliament

ROME, Feb 5 (NNN-AGENCIES) —Italy’s president has asked the former head of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, to form a new government after the previous coalition collapsed.

President Sergio Mattarella said Italy needed a “high-profile government” to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic and the worst economic crisis in decades.

Politicians failed to agree a coalition following the resignation of Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte last week.

Draghi will now have to put forward an administration that leaders support.

He was summoned to Rome’s historic Quirinale Palace on Wednesday by President Mattarella, who gave Draghi a mandate and said he hoped he would break the parliamentary stalemate.

In a brief statement after accepting the challenge, Draghi said Italy was facing a “difficult moment” and that it was time for unity. “I am confident that in talks with parliamentary and other groups, we will find unity and the ability to find a responsible solution.”

Italy’s financial markets welcomed the news that the country’s star technocrat had been brought in, with the Milan stock market up almost 3%.

Political parties have been divided over how to spend €222bn of EU Covid recovery funds, amid a pandemic in which nearly 90,000 Italians have died – the sixth highest death toll in the world.

However, Italy’s anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S), which has been in government since 2018, has already said that it will not back a government led by Draghi.

In his statement on Wednesday Draghi said the challenges Italy now faced were “beating the pandemic, completing the vaccination campaign, offering answers to everyday challenges and getting the country back on track”.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, a technocrat like Draghi, resigned last week after losing his Senate majority – which restricted his ability to perform government business – and failing to form a new coalition.

The political turmoil came about when former PM Matteo Renzi pulled his small, liberal Italia Viva party out of the centrist coalition government over Conte’s plans for spending EU recovery funds on the coronavirus crisis. He said he would only return if Conte accepted a list of demands.

Conte then won a vote of confidence in the lower house, the Chamber of Deputies, but he then scraped through a Senate vote without an absolute majority. He said he hoped his resignation would result in the creation of a stronger coalition government.

He had previously led two very different, successive coalition governments from 2018. For 15 months he headed a coalition between M5S and the far-right League, until its leader Matteo Salvini pulled out in a failed bid to force elections. Mr Conte then led a four-party, centre-left coalition dominated by M5S and the Democratic Party (PD).

Renzi said there was now a good opportunity for Italy to find a new direction. “In a time of difficulty, that is the period in which we are to risk change, to invest in the future – if we’re not now able to change strategy, we risk also destroying [Italy] post-pandemic.” — NNN-AGENCIES

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