The Borneo Post

Italy’s populist govt takes office

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ROME: Italy’s new antiestabl­ishment government took power, ending months of deadlock that saw the eurozone’s third largest economy narrowly avoid snap elections after a last-gasp coalition deal.

New Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, 53, was sworn in at the head of the first populist government in an EU founding member that was forged by the Five Star Movement and the farright League.

“The new right is in power,” declared left-leaning daily La Repubblica.

The handover of power follows an inconclusi­ve March election and months of political turmoil which had spooked global financial markets and spread unease among Italy’s EU partners.

Reaction to the new government was wary, with concerns still running high about Italy’s massive debt mountain and the future of the EU and its single currency.

The coalition – which faces a parliament­ary confidence motion early next week that it is set to win – plans to boost public spending and wants to renegotiat­e EU treaties and review the bloc’s economic governance.

Its proposals – which include a monthly basic income for Italy’s poorest and a two tier ‘flat’ tax – have worried Brussels and the financial markets given Italy’s massive 2.3 trillion euro (US$2.7 trillion) debt.

European powerhouse Germany vowed an ‘open’ approach to Conte’s team, and Chancellor Angela Merkel wished Conte ‘good luck’ in a statement.

“I look forward to carrying on our close partnershi­p with you and to continue deepening it,” she said.

European Council president Donald Tusk said his appointmen­t came at a ‘crucial time’ for Italy and the European Union – which is facing its own crisis with the departure of Britain.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker was more blunt – saying Italians need to work harder, be less corrupt and stop blaming the EU for the problems of the country’s poor south.

In a sign of the direction of the new cabinet, Conte named hardline anti-migrant League leader Matteo Salvini as interior minister and euroscepti­c Paola Savona – whose initial role as finance minister was vetoed by the president – as European affairs minister.

Five Star leader Luigi Di Maio is minister for economic developmen­t and both he and Salvini will be deputy prime ministers.

“We’ll get to work to create work, for those who don’t have it, for those that do but without dignity,” Di Maio said.

Salvini has long wanted his new post, from where he will aim to stop ‘the business’ of migration, cracking down on people smuggling networks and speed up expulsions of illegal immigrants in a country on the front line of Europe’s migrant crisis.

“The people have voted for us to increase security and that’s what we’re going to do,” said Salvini, an ally of French far-right figurehead Marine Le Pen.

Salvini said he would travel to Sicily on Sunday, where the majority of migrants arrive.

Just days ago fresh elections had seemed inevitable for Italy but on Thursday President Sergio Mattarella named Conte as prime minister for the second time in less than a fortnight and approved his revised cabinet.

Mattarella had triggered a crisis at the weekend when he vetoed Savona as economy minister in a previously proposed Five StarLeague government even though it had parliament­ary approval. — AFP

 ??  ?? Mattarella poses with newly appointed Ministers after the sworn-in ceremony at the Quirinal palace in Rome. — Reuters photo
Mattarella poses with newly appointed Ministers after the sworn-in ceremony at the Quirinal palace in Rome. — Reuters photo

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