Khaleej Times

Carlo Cottarelli

Former IMF official picked by Italy’s President Sergio Mattarella as caretaker prime minister

- Reuters

rome — Italy’s political crisis moved into unchartere­d waters on Wednesday, as the head of state sought a last-minute political compromise to end the three-month search for a government and restore calm to financial markets.

Prime Minister-designate Carlo Cottarelli, tasked by the president with calming tensions and laying plans for repeat elections later this year, raised hopes of a breakthrou­gh on Wednesday with comments suggesting compromise was in the air.

Italy has searched for a government since inconclusi­ve elections in March. Two anti-establishm­ent parties came close to forming a ruling coalition last weekend, but backed away after the president demanded a change in their cabinet lineup.

The 5-Star Movement and the right-wing League abandoned their bid to take power in a coalition after President Sergio Mattarella vetoed

The current circumstan­ces have caused me to wait for further developmen­ts Carlo Cottarelli, PM-designate

their choice of 81-year-old euroscepti­c Paolo Savona as economy minister.

The prospect of the political crisis being drawn out further with possible new elections later this year has brought turmoil to financial markets.

But Cottarelli, whom Mattarella brought in as a stop-gap prime minister, was quoted by Ansa news agency as saying that new possibilit­ies had emerged “for the birth of a political government,” implying that a government headed by politician­s rather than technocrat­s like himself could be in the offing.

“These circumstan­ces, also considerin­g the market tensions, have caused me to wait for further developmen­ts.”

The 5-Star also seemed willing to rethink its weekend decision to defy the president’s veto and go back to elections.

The parties are now trying to find “a point of compromise on another name” for the economy ministry, said a source close to 5-Star, the single-biggest party in the new parliament.

League leader Matteo Salvini, who is surging in opinion polls, appeared to throw cold water on the notion that his party and 5-Star could try again to form a coalition.

He said Italy should return to an election. “The earlier we vote the better because it’s the best way to get out of this quagmire and confusion,” he told. He did, however, appear open to an interim administra­tion to govern for a few months, saying an election at the end of July would be “disruptive” for Italian seasonal workers. —

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 ?? AFP ?? A view shows the Quirinale palace, official residence of the italian president in central rome on Wednesday. —
AFP A view shows the Quirinale palace, official residence of the italian president in central rome on Wednesday. —

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