The Hamilton Spectator

Renzi told to stay put a bit more; foes press for vote

- FRANCES D’EMILIO

ROME — Calls mounted rapidly Monday from populist and other opposition leaders for quick elections in Italy, seeking to capitalize on Premier Matteo Renzi’s humiliatin­g defeat in a referendum on government-championed reforms.

The president, though, told Renzi to stay in office a bit longer until a critical budget law is passed. Some officials say Parliament could pass that law as soon as the end of the week.

“With the referendum vote, the Italians have expressed a clear political signal — the desire to go as soon as possible to elections,” wrote Vito Crimi and Danilo Toninelli, two of the top leaders of the populist, anti-euro, 5-Star Movement in a piece accompanyi­ng the blog of Movement founder, comic Beppe Grillo.

Barely an hour after the referendum was resounding­ly rejected Sunday by voters, Renzi announced he would keep his promise to quit if the measures fail to win popular muster.

With the defeat plunging Europe’s fourth-largest economy into political and economic uncertaint­y, and financial markets seeking reassuranc­es, President Sergio Mattarella asked Renzi to hold off on leaving until the budget legislatio­n is passed.

Renzi called on Mattarella at the Quirinal Palace Monday evening and told the head of state it was not possible to continue in his post, after putting the fate of his nearly three-year-old centre-left government on the line in the referendum vote and losing, a palace statement said.

But, in a decision widely expected, Mattarella told Renzi “to delay his resignatio­n until that task (of the budget law) is completed.”

Mattarella can ask someone else to try to form a government and work with the same Parliament, at least for a few months. Renzi’s squabbling Democrats are the biggest party in the legislatur­e, which could lead the president to tap someone from the Democratic Party fold.

But Renzi, as head of the party, could very well decide that early elections are the best course, to avoid the risk of angering the electorate by delaying, ventured Mario Calabresi, editor and commentato­r at La Repubblica daily.

Demands mounted from opposition parties, eager to capitalize on Renzi’s political misfortune­s, for elections to be called far ahead of the spring 2018 due date. Former three-time Premier Silvio Berlusconi, the centre-right leader, was among them.

“We are certain that the president of the republic will know how to pinpoint the most correct solution to assure Italians ... the possibilit­y to vote and finally choose, after three non-elected government­s,” Berlusconi said.

Berlusconi himself was forced to resign in 2011 amid growing internatio­nal concern over Italy’s sovereign debt crisis and was replaced by economist Mario Monti, without elections. After Monti’s government unravelled, a Democrat, Enrico Letta, was appointed. Renzi, as the Democratic Party leader, used party manoeuvrin­g to push Letta out of office and take the premiershi­p for himself in February 2014.

Angling to gain national power for the first time are the 5-Stars, who did well in mayoral races earlier this year, including winning City Hall in Rome, Italy’s capital.

Grillo himself can’t hold office because of a manslaught­er conviction arising from an auto accident.

Also energized by Renzi’s debacle is the anti-immigrant Northern League, whose leader has allied himself with far-right figures in Europe including France’s Marine Le Pen, head of the National Front.

While Italy’s opposition parties were united in antipathy for Renzi’s policies and reform course, they have little else in common and have already begun vying to position themselves for eventual campaignin­g for Parliament.

Since the Italian president tries to ensure Parliament can carry out its full fiveyear term, analysts expect that Mattarella will appoint a transition government to draft a new election law to satisfy parties worried the way the rules now stand.

 ?? CHRIS RATCLIFFE, BLOOMBERG ?? Matteo Renzi, Italy’s prime minister, speaks at a news conference following the constituti­onal reform referendum results in Rome on Monday.
CHRIS RATCLIFFE, BLOOMBERG Matteo Renzi, Italy’s prime minister, speaks at a news conference following the constituti­onal reform referendum results in Rome on Monday.

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