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Populists battle over right to govern Italy

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ROME: Rival populist leaders fought Monday for the right to govern Italy after their surge in a general election left the country in political limbo.

The anti-immigrant League party and the anti-establishm­ent Five Star Movement (M5S) each claimed Sunday’s vote gave them a mandate to lead the nation of 60 million.

League leader Matteo Salvini said that he had “the right and the duty” to form a government after its surprise success at the heart of a right-wing coalition.

But M5S, which won the biggest share of the vote of any single party, claimed it was the winner. Its leader Luigi Di Maio said it had a “responsibi­lity” to form a government.

With most ballots counted, the League was leading the dominant right-wing coalition, which won roughly 37 percent of the vote overall.

The League by itself was closing in on 18 percent, ahead of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia (Go Italy) party, which collapsed to 14 percent.

Salvini’s party surged in the polls after promising to shut down Roma camps, deport hundreds of thousands of migrants and tackle what it called “danger” of Islam.

“Italians have chosen to take back control of the country from the insecurity and precarious­ness put in place by (center-left Democratic Party leader Matteo) Renzi,” Salvini told a press conference.

However much depends on M5S, which has drawn support from Italians fed up with traditiona­l parties and a lack of economic opportunit­y.

It won 32 percent of the vote.

The M5S had previously refused to align itself with other parties, which it considered part of a “corrupt” system.

But Di Maio said his party now “feels the responsibi­lity to form a government.”

To that end, he said he was “open to discussion with all political actors.”

“This election was a triumph for the Five Star Movement. We are the winners,” a joyous Di Maio told a news conference conference on Monday.

“More than half of voters in some regions have voted for the Movement,” he added.

According to polling company YouTrend, the M5S was set to gain 231 seats in the lower house Chamber of Deputies and 115 in the upper house Senate.

It could therefore form a majority with either one of the League, Forza Italia and the Democratic Party (PD).

Given its heated rivalry with the PD and Berlusconi, M5S’s most likely ally looked to be the euroskepti­c League.

However Salvini swiftly ruled out the prospect of forming a coalition with the M5S.

“N. O. No, underlined three times,” Salvini told reporters.

Di Maio responded to Salvini by saying that “we represent the whole nation, from Val D’aosta to Sicily. The others can’t say that.”

The boost for far-right and populist parties has prompted comparison­s to Britain’s vote to leave the European Union and the rise of US President Donald Trump.

Prominent British pro-Brexit figure Nigel Farage congratula­ted the Five Star Movement, his allies in the European Parliament, “for topping the poll” as by far Italy’s biggest single party.

Resentment at the hundreds of thousands of migrant arrivals in Italy in recent years fired up the campaign, along with frustratio­n about social inequaliti­es.

“These are historic results,” Giancarlo Giorgetti, deputy head of the League, told reporters in Milan.

Alessandro Di Battista, another senior Five Star leader, said: “Everyone is going to have to come and speak to us.”

PD leader Renzi looks doomed after his party dropped to 19 percent of the vote.

“The populists have won and the Democratic Party has lost,” PD lawmaker Andrea Marcucci admitted.

Berlusconi, a flamboyant three-time former prime minister, is on the ropes after his electoral flop.

The billionair­e, who won his first election in 1994, has returned to the limelight at the age of 81 despite a career overshadow­ed by sex scandals and legal woes.

 ??  ?? Five Star Movement leader Luigi Di Maio during a news conference, the day after Italy’s parliament­ary election, in Rome on Monday. (Reuters)
Five Star Movement leader Luigi Di Maio during a news conference, the day after Italy’s parliament­ary election, in Rome on Monday. (Reuters)

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