Oman Daily Observer

Italy’s anti-establishm­ent leaders try to avert poll

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ROME: Italy’s anti-establishm­ent political leaders Matteo Salvini and Luigi Di Maio met on Thursday for last-ditch talks to resurrect a coalition government and avert a new snap election, the prospect of which has rattled global markets.

A source from Di Maio’s 5-Star Movement said there was hope of an agreement by Friday, but still no decision on a nominee for economy minister, a key post in any line-up.

There was no immediate indication from the League on the prospects of success.

President Sergio Mattarella torpedoed an initial attempt by the League and 5-Star to form a coalition, rejecting their candidate for the economy portfolio, 81-year-old economist Paolo Savona, a euroscepti­c who has spoken out against the single currency.

Global financial markets have been recovering over the past two days after tumbling earlier this week over the prospect of a new Italian election dominated by debate over Italy’s future in the euro zone.

On Wednesday Di Maio made a last-ditch offer to resurrect the coalition bid, and Salvini said he would “seriously consider” it.

“You will have to be patient,” Salvini told reporters at Rome airport when asked about a possible solution to the crisis. He was whisked straight to parliament.

After rejecting Savona, Mattarella named former Internatio­nal Monetary Fund official Carlo Cottarelli to form a stop-gap government of experts to lead the country to elections. But Cottarelli has so far failed to form a viable cabinet.

Di Maio, whose 5-Star emerged from the inconclusi­ve March 4 elections as the largest single party, urged Salvini to drop his insistence on Savona for the economy portfolio and agree to give him another post.

“Di Maio — Salvini: the Final Deal,” was the headline in Corriere della Sera newspaper, echoing the national feeling of crisis put into a holding pattern. Salvini and Di Maio had agreed when they first tried to form a government that Giuseppe Conte, a little-known law professor, would be prime minister.

 ?? — AFP ?? Picture shows flags at the top of the clock tower and the main entrance of the Quirinale presidenti­al palace in Rome on Thursday.
— AFP Picture shows flags at the top of the clock tower and the main entrance of the Quirinale presidenti­al palace in Rome on Thursday.

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