Italian PD, 5-Star to Form Coalition Led By Conte
By Staff, Agencies
Italy’s 5-Star Movement and the opposition Democratic Party (PD) said Wednesday they would try to form a coalition, setting aside years of hostility to avert a snap election and ease economic uncertainty.
Following days of often tense and difficult talks, the leaders of 5-Star and the PD told Italy’s president that the new government should once again be led by the outgoing Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte.
The two sides still need to agree on a shared policy platform and team of ministers, but 5-Star chief Luigi Di Maio and his PD counterpart Nicola Zingaretti said they had pledged to find common ground for the good of the country.
“We love Italy and we consider it worthwhile to try this experience,” Zingaretti told reporters. Speaking shortly afterward, Di Maio said: “We made commitments to the Italians ... and come what may we want to fulfill them.”
President Sergio Mattarella summoned Conte for talks Thursday at 9:30 a.m., and was widely expected to hand him a fresh mandate.
The previous coalition made up of 5-Star and the far-right League collapsed this month when League leader Matteo Salvini withdrew from the alliance hoping to trigger an early election and cash in on his surging popularity.
But his move backfired when Conte refused to resign immediately, giving 5-Star and the PD time to try to overcome their fierce mutual animosity and agree to a government that had previously appeared impossible.
“The only thing that unites them is their hatred of the League,” Salvini said bitterly after meeting President Sergio Mattarella in an effort to convince him to call elections.
“Millions of Italians are being held hostage by a hundred parliamentarians who are looking to cling onto their posts.”
The prospect of a new administration led by Conte, an academic who is considered close to the 5-Star, has buoyed markets, which are betting that Italy will get a fiscally prudent government that will avoid confrontation with Europe.
The League is highly euroskeptic and had promised swinging tax cuts for 2020 that economists warned could put unsustainable pressure on Italy’s towering debt mountain.
Italy’s 10-year bond yield fell to a record low below 1 percent, two-year bond yields fell to their lowest since May 2018 and Italy’s 50-year bond yield fell to a record low around 2.266 percent.
However, a coalition pact is not yet a done deal. The tentative accord could still unravel even as President Sergio Mattarella wraps up his consultations aimed at resolving the political chaos that was unexpectedly unleashed by Salvini.
The 5-Star and the PD have yet to agree on other top government posts, besides the prime minister’s position, or reveal a common policy platform.
Mattarella is due to meet 5-Star leaders at 7 p.m. If they give him the green light, he will likely call in Conte and invite him to form a new Cabinet, Italy’s 67th since the end of World War II.
However, in an added complication, 5-Star has said it will put its proposed deal with the PD to an online vote of its members. Many 5-Star supporters have taken to social media to denounce any pact with the center-left and a “yes” vote cannot be taken for granted.
As negotiations went down to the wire, one of the posts still in play was that of deputy prime minister. The PD wants this job for one of its own, now that it has agreed to Conte staying on as prime minister.
“The problem is that if there is a premier from the 5-Star it is fair that his deputy is from the PD,” PD deputy leader Andrea Orlando said on Twitter.
Conte, a virtually unknown lawyer when he was chosen by the League and 5-Star to lead their new government last year, was seen as a voice of reason within the outgoing coalition and has good relations with Mattarella.
An opinion poll in daily Corriere della Sera Wednesday showed Salvini’s approval rating had plunged by 15 points since he pulled the plug on the government, and is now 16 points behind Conte’s.