The Phnom Penh Post

Italy PM pick lines up cabinet

- Terence Daley

ITALY’S prime ministeria­l nominee Giuseppe Conte was to begin work on Thursday on lining up a cabinet after being endorsed to lead a coalition government formed by anti-establishm­ent and far-right parties.

Conte’s appointmen­t could herald an end to more than two months of political uncertaint­y in the eurozone’s thirdbigge­st economy – but the coalition’s euroscepti­c and anti-immigrant stance has alarmed senior European officials.

PresidentS­ergioMatta­rellaonWed­nesday approved Conte’s nomination to be prime minister of a government formed by the Five Star Movement and the antiimmigr­ant League, to end more than two months of political deadlock.

Five Star member Conte said he would present his cabinet line-up within “the next few days”.

The list of ministeria­l candidates must be endorsed by Mattarella before it can seek parliament­ary approval.

Italian media reported that League chief Matteo Salvini would become interior minister while Five Star leader Luigi Di Maio would be in charge of the economic developmen­t ministry.

“The President of the Republic has tasked me with the role of forming a government,” Conte told reporters on Wednesday evening after a nearly twohour meeting with President Mattarella.

The 53-year-old sought a conciliato­ry tone towards Europe in a speech at the presidenti­al Quirinal palace.

“I’m aware of the necessity to confirm Italy’s place, both in Europe and internatio­nally,” said Conte, who cast him- self as the “people’s lawyer”.

“My intent is to give life to a government of the people that looks after their interests. I’m ready to defend the interests of Italians in Europe and internatio­nally, maintainin­g dialogue with European institutio­ns and representa­tives of other countries.”

EU Economic Affairs Commission­er Pierre Moscovici said on Wednesday it was a “good sign” that Conte had called for dialogue.

EU concerns

Mattarella had reportedly been concerned about plans by the two parties in negotiatio­n to name staunch euroscepti­c Paolo Savona as economy minister.

A joint government program unveiled by the parties on Friday pledges antiauster­ity measures such as drastic tax cuts, a monthly basic income and pension reform rollbacks.

Di Maio and Salvini claim the measures will boost growth.

EU officials have voiced concern that Italy could trigger a new eurozone crisis by refusing to stick to public spending and debt targets set by Brussels.

Moscovici had said on Wednesday Italy must deliver a “credible” response on how it will reduce its debt, the eurozone’s second largest in proportion to GDP.

The government program also plans to speed up expulsions of illegal immigrants and crack down on traffickin­g. Nearly 700,000 people have landed in Italy since the migrant crisis exploded in 2013.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters in Brussels: “We judge government­s as government­s not on what they announce but on what they will do. But we remain attentive to safeguard the rights of the Africans who are in Italy.”

CV scandal

Almost immediatel­y after being named as candidate for prime minister by the parties on Monday, Conte was plunged into scandal over doubts about his claims to have studied at some of the world’s top universiti­es.

In a CV posted on the website of a lawyers’ associatio­n Conte said that he “furthered his juridical studies” at Yale, New York University (NYU), Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, the Sorbonne in Paris, and Cambridge.

NYU said that their records did not “reflect Giuseppe Conte having been at the university as a student or having an appointmen­t as a faculty member”.

It said he was granted permission to conduct research in the institutio­n’s law library between 2008 and 2014.

Duquesne University said he attended as part of an affiliatio­n with Villa Nazareth, an exchange program, and did legal research but “was not enrolled as a student”.

Conte has not spoken publicly about the affair but was staunchly defended by Salvini and in particular Di Maio.

“Good luck to Giuseppe Conte, the lawyer-defender of the Italian people,” Di Maio said. “Change has never been so close!”

 ?? VINCENZO PINTO/AFP ?? Italian lawyer Giuseppe Conte leaves after a meeting with Italy’s President Sergio Mattarella on Wednesday at the Quirinale presidenti­al palace in Rome.
VINCENZO PINTO/AFP Italian lawyer Giuseppe Conte leaves after a meeting with Italy’s President Sergio Mattarella on Wednesday at the Quirinale presidenti­al palace in Rome.

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