Santa Fe New Mexican

Italian election results rattle EU

- By Raf Casert

BRUSSELS — Since the European Union’s founding treaty was signed in Rome more than 60 years ago, Italy has been an unabashed booster of increased unity and common purpose. That may have come to an end.

Euroskepti­cs and populists rode a wave of hostility toward all things EU and surged to the fore in Italian elections on Sunday, turning the founding EU nation into a potential obstructio­nist just when the bloc was emerging from a decade of economic gloom and seemed poised to rekindle its grand ambitions.

Beyond moving away from the EU policies in Brussels, the Italian results were the latest indication that the continent is tilting further to the right.

Sunday’s stunning outcome came at the end of a seesaw day for the EU that started out well enough when the German Socialists finally threw their weight behind a staunchly pro Europe grand coalition under Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Now, it seemed, the Merkel Emmanuel Macron partnershi­p was on and the German-French engine was primed to push a core group of EU nations toward more unity.

Then, Italy’s results started to come in and the message from Italian voters was clear: “Don’t necessaril­y count on us.” Instead of a smooth ride under fair weather economic conditions, the bloc should brace for more of the chaos and havoc that anti-EU populists have spread in many member nations over the past few years.

“The European Union is having a bad evening,” France’s far-right Marine Le Pen tweeted elatedly as it became clear that more than half the Italian electorate had backed two stridently anti-EU parties.

Le Pen may have been a washout in last year’s French presidenti­al elections against Macron, and Germany’s establishe­d parties may have closed ranks against the right-wing nationalis­t AfD in Parliament, but populism is thriving and in power from Poland’s shipyards to the coffee tables of Vienna. In Hungary, Viktor Orbán has been in power with his style of so-called “illiberal” democracy in Hungary since 2010.

One of the first things Matteo Salvini, the head of Italy’s victorious anti-migrant, euroskepti­c League party, said Monday was that the shared euro currency was “wrong.” The EU is smarting badly from Britain’s 2016 decision to leave the bloc, so another ally turning a cold shoulder is the last thing the bloc needs.

“The outcome of the elections could not be farther away from what the European Commission, as well as most other EU government­s, were hoping for,” said the Europe think tank VoteWatch, calling it an “unpreceden­ted political shock.”

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