Bangkok Post

Ruling party bracing for more splits

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ROME: Italy’s ruling 5-Star Movement faces desertions and ruinous splits which may be impossible to stem at a March congress, party officials are warning.

The anti-establishm­ent movement, which won twice as many votes as its nearest rival at the last national election in 2018, has been beset with problems ever since.

It shed votes when in government with the hard-right League until August last year, and has done so since forming a new administra­tion with the centreleft Democratic Party (PD).

Now 5-Star’s parliament­arians and supporters are divided between those who want a return to its origins as a goit-alone protest party, those who favour cementing the alliance with the PD, and those wanting to hook up again with the League.

5-Star’s candidate won just 3.5% of the vote in a regional election in northern Italy on Sunday after former leader Luigi Di Maio resigned, complainin­g of backstabbi­ng from colleagues.

“The Movement used to be poetry and hope, now it’s guerrilla warfare and suspicion,” said Max Bugani, a veteran 5-Star politician who now works with its mayor of Rome, Virginia Raggi.

Mr Bugani, an influentia­l 5-Star figure since its foundation in 2009, said the party could soon split up, and that this would be better than “pushing on together but arguing every day”.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, an independen­t close to 5-Star, wants it to commit to a long-term alliance with the PD in a “progressiv­e front” against a popular rightist bloc spearheade­d by League leader Matteo Salvini.

This strategy is backed by 5-Star’s founder, comedian Beppe Grillo, but is resisted by Mr Di Maio and other senior figures who want to remain equidistan­t from left and right, free to join forces with one or the other as circumstan­ces dictate.

Opinion polls put 5-Star on about 16% support, half its 2018 level and lagging the PD on 19% and the League on 30%.

The party’s tensions are likely to come to a head at a March congress intended to pick a new leader, reorganise, and set policy priorities. But some of its lawmakers see defections even before then.

They fear that caretaker leader Vito Crimi, a low profile senator, may struggle to impose discipline on an increasing­ly anarchic parliament­ary group.

“We are going to lose some people,” said a senior source, suggesting some deserters were financiall­y motivated to avoid an internal 5-Star rule obliging its lawmakers to give up part of their salaries to fund causes decided by party members.

Last month, three 5-Star senators defected to the League, depleting the government’s already slim majority, and a League official said contacts were under way to lure another five or six senators.

Asked to comment on this, a 5-Star member of the government told Reuters “it’s possible”.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Vito Crimi, the 5-Star Movement’s caretaker leader, talks with the media in front of Italy’s parliament.
REUTERS Vito Crimi, the 5-Star Movement’s caretaker leader, talks with the media in front of Italy’s parliament.

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