Bangkok Post

Renzi boycotts cabinet meet as govt teeters on edge

-

ROME: Former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said Italy’s government could collapse after his small party boycotted a cabinet meeting over a contested justice reform and the prime minister suggested he was ready to resign.

Mr Renzi’s centrist Italia Viva Party is in the coalition with the anti-establishm­ent 5-Star Movement and the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), but he has constantly taken centre stage in coalition bickering since it was formed last September.

While opinion polls give his party only about 4% of votes, its support is crucial in parliament and particular­ly in the Senate, where the government majority is very thin. On Thursday, the cabinet approved a reform of the statute of limitation­s, which disbands trials if a verdict is not reached within a set limit.

Mr Renzi, who opposes the reform, challenged Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte to put together a new coalition after Mr Conte appealed for unity among the feuding ruling parties.

If Mr Conte “wants to set up a new ruling coalition we won’t oppose it”, Mr Renzi said on Thursday in a video message posted on Facebook.

“We’ll cheer you on, but we’ll never be the ones who give up an idea to keep a seat”, he added.

Mr Renzi’s party had threatened to present a no-confidence motion against justice Minister Alfonso Bonafede, a prominent member of the 5-Star movement.

“If this happens, I would act consequent­ially,” Mr Conte said, suggesting he could resign if Mr Renzi presented such a motion. “We don’t want to replace Italia Viva in the coalition with another party but they must be clear on what they want to do.”

Time limits for prosecutio­ns have been at the centre of fierce political debate for years, with magistrate­s saying it is all but impossible to reach a definitive verdict for a multitude of financial crimes within the prescribed time frame.

One beneficiar­y of the statute of limitation­s has been former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, who has seen more than 10 trials against him collapse because of time constraint­s.

A survey this week by the Ipsos agency showed just 8% of Italians think Mr Renzi is acting for the good of the country, compared with 85% who said he was driven by self-interest.

“In theory, such tension might eventually lead to a collapse of the government, however we do not think that we are there yet, and we expect yesterday’s tension to ease,” the Unicredit bank said in a report released yesterday.

 ??  ?? Renzi: Opposes justice reform
Renzi: Opposes justice reform

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand