Times of Oman

Italian election winners reach deal on speakers

-

ROME: Italy’s anti-establishm­ent 5-Star Movement hooked up with conservati­ve parties on Saturday to elect the speakers of both houses of parliament, but there was no sign yet they might extend this pact and form a government.

The March 4 national election ended in a hung parliament, with the 5-Star becoming the largest party and a rightist alliance, including ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia party and the anti-migrant League, emerging as the biggest bloc.

After days of behind-thescenes talks, the two factions joined forces to elect 5-Star heavyweigh­t Roberto Fico president of the lower house and Forza Italia veteran Elisabetta Casellati president of the Senate - both highly prestigiou­s posts.

The conservati­ve alliance came close to collapse on Friday after the League sided with 5-Star to reject Forza Italia’s first choice for the Senate position, but hasty overnight negotiatio­ns patched up the row, at least for now. “I am very happy, moved and proud that parliament has started to work and that the centrerigh­t has held together,” League leader Matteo Salvini said after Saturday’s twin votes.

The elections of the speakers open the way for formal government consultati­ons, which will be led by President Sergio Mattarella and are expected to start early next month.

The 5-Star and the right have enough seats in parliament to govern Italy, but there are many impediment­s to such a deal in terms of policy mismatches and personalit­y clashes.

“Here we have seen that there are (parliament­ary) forces which carry considerab­le weight. But for us, government is something different,” said Giorgia Meloni, head of the far-right Brothers of Italy party which is in the conservati­ve alliance. “For us, 5-Star absolutely does not represent any sort of guarantee, just like the Democratic Party,” she added, referring to the centre-left PD which lost power in the March 4 election.

Nonetheles­s, Saturday’s ballots showed that the 5-Star is evolving. It used to excoriate such parliament­ary deal-making as old-style politics, so by agreeing to a deal in both houses it suggested it might prove more flexible in future.

The election of the speakers also represente­d a blow to Berlusconi, who dominated Italy’s centre-right for almost 25 years but must now play second fiddle to Salvini after the League overtook his Forza Italia party in the March 4 vote.

He accused Salvini of betrayal on Friday after the League sided with the 5-Star over the speaker nomination­s. On Saturday Berlusconi altered his tone, saying he still trusted Salvini and promised to work for the good of Italy, the euro zone’s third largest economy.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? - Reuters ?? SPELLING OUT: The new elected Senate president Forza Italia party’s Maria Elisabetta Casellati speaks during the second session day in Rome, Italy on March 24, 2018.
- Reuters SPELLING OUT: The new elected Senate president Forza Italia party’s Maria Elisabetta Casellati speaks during the second session day in Rome, Italy on March 24, 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman