Arab Times

Italy’s new PM completes G7 baptism of fire

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LA MALBAIE, Canada, June 10, (AFP): A month ago, he was a littleknow­n law professor. On Saturday, Giuseppe Conte was heading home to Italy as a fully-fledged member of the most exclusive club of world leaders.

And he may just have found a new ally in Donald Trump.

After the political novice took over as premier on June 1, commentato­rs were swift to question his ability to stand shoulder to shoulder with the likes of Trump and Germany’s Angela Merkel at this weekend’s G7 summit in Canada.

While Europe’s leaders have often allowed Germany and France to coordinate a common stance at internatio­nal gatherings, Conte raised eyebrows at the start of the summit by siding with Trump on the issue of Russia’s readmissio­n to their club.

Conte turned to Trump’s favorite medium Twitter to make his point, in a sign that he is another world leader willing to use social media to bypass journalist­s.

He later appeared to fall into line with Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron by agreeing it was in fact still too early for Moscow to be brought back into the fold, four years after it was expelled for annexing Crimea.

But Italy’s left-wing Repubblica newspaper pointed out how Conte watched the evening’s entertainm­ent sat alongside Trump, who might otherwise have found himself isolated in Canada.

And the Italian also received an early invite to the White House although a date has yet been set.

“Just met the new Prime Minister of Italy, @GiuseppeCo­nteIT, a really great guy. He will be honored in Washington, at the @WhiteHouse, shortly,” Trump said on Twitter after flying out of Canada.

“He will do a great job — the people of Italy got it right!”

That Conte should find common ground with Trump should be no great surprise given that they both owe their rise in large part to a backlash against globalizat­ion and the political establishm­ent.

But if Trump is the unabashed oneman leader of a movement, the mildmanner­ed Conte has been portrayed as the puppet of Italy’s far-right League party and the anti-establishm­ent Five Star Movement (M5S).

Trump has railed against the “swamp” establishm­ent in Washington, and Conte made it clear on his internatio­nal debut that he was willing to take on powerbroke­rs from Brussels.

After talks with European Union Commission supremo Jean-Claude Juncker and European Council President Donald Tusk, Conte told reporters he had insisted on an overhaul to the so-called Dublin Regulation­s which require people seeking asylum to register in the first EU state they enter.

Italy has long argued that the rules as they stand are unfair given so many migrants trying to seek asylum from across the Mediterran­ean land in boats on its southern coast.

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