Oman Daily Observer

Europe suffers Italian blow but bigger tests loom

- NOAH BARKIN

The resounding “no” from Italian voters to Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s referendum on constituti­onal reform was not a rejection of the European Union and its single currency, as jubilant populists from across the bloc claimed on Monday. But the vote, which pushes Renzi out of office, does represent a significan­t setback for Europe at a time when its leaders are scrambling to mount a credible response to Brexit, the election of Donald Trump in the United States and their stubborn economic woes at home.

In one fell swoop, it adds another country to the list of EU members that are likely to be pre-occupied by domestic politics in 2017, a year in which the Dutch, French, Germans, and possibly the British, will go to the polls.

And it sends a warning to other European reformers like Francois Fillon, the conservati­ve frontrunne­r for the French presidency, who has promised no less than five referendum­s to push through his domestic agenda if he is elected next spring.

More immediatel­y, despite the relatively calm reaction of financial markets on Monday, the vote will deepen concerns about Italy’s under-funded banking sector and the economic prospects of the euro zone’s third biggest member state.

That, in turn, could complicate the calculus for the European Central Bank, which meets on Thursday to decide on the future of its controvers­ial bond purchase programme.

“This won’t push Italy back into crisis for now,” said Marcel Fratzscher, head of the DIW economic institute in Berlin and a former top official at the European Central Bank.

“But it means lost time for a country that faces huge problems with its banks, its enormous public debt levels and high unemployme­nt. There is a significan­t danger that the reform course will now slow.”

Renzi, seen by his European partners as an anchor of stability in a country where political upheaval has been the norm for decades, won just over 40 per cent of the votes in the referendum, a far worse result than polls had predicted.

His defeat comes only days after deeply unpopular French President Francois Hollande, also a leftist, bowed to political realities and announced he would not seek a second term.

Renzi’s departure could lead to early elections in Italy next year. It increases the risks of the anti-euro 5-Star Movement gaining power, although the prospect of that remains slim.

After the Brexit vote went bad for David Cameron in June, it is the second time in half a year that the leader of a major EU member state tied his future to a referendum and lost, a developmen­t that was seized upon by the region’s anti-EU firebrands.

“The Italians rejected Renzi and the EU,” Marine Le Pen of France’s far-right National Front said on Twitter.

“This vote looks to me to be more about the euro than constituti­onal change,” added Nigel Farage of the UK Independen­ce Party (UKIP).

But unlike Britain, polls show that a solid majority of Italian voters are in favour of both the EU and the euro. They were encouraged to vote “no” by all of the major parties in Italy outside of Renzi’s Partito Democratic­o (PD).

His defeat, therefore, which came on the same day that Austrian voters sent a farright candidate to defeat in a presidenti­al run-off, looks less like a rejection of Europe and the political establishm­ent, and more like a serious miscalcula­tion on the part of Renzi.

“When a prime minister who will always be remembered for taking office through an old-style party coup calls a national referendum in a country that’s still struggling to emerge from a triple-dip recession, he can expect an unfavourab­le result,” said Nicholas Spiro of Lauressa Advisory.

That won’t cushion the impact for Europe, whose leaders have promised to unveil their post-Brexit vision for the EU in the Italian capital next March, the 60th anniversar­y of the bloc’s founding Rome treaty. Who will host that summit is now an open question.

The same month, Dutch voters will go to the polls and British Prime Minister Theresa May is expected to invoke Article 50 of the EU treaty, triggering a tight two-year countdown to Brexit — a timeline made all the more challengin­g by Europe’s heavy election calendar.

The vote, which pushes Renzi out of office, represents a significan­t setback for Europe at a time when its leaders are scrambling to mount a credible response to Brexit, the election of Donald Trump in the United States and their stubborn economic woes at home.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman