Malta Independent

Italian hard-liner Salvini vows to return League to power

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Down but not out, Matteo Salvini pledged Sunday to tens of thousands of die-hard backers of his populist League that he will return to power stronger than before, as he seeks to rebound from a grave political miscalcula­tion that pushed his party from government.

“I’d rather concede seven ministry posts to traitors now that we will win back with interest and transparen­cy in a few months,” Salvini told an annual pilgrimage of cheering, banner-waving League voters to a foothill Lombard town with long historical associatio­ns to nationalis­t movements.

This year’s gathering took on additional significan­ce as Salvini whips up his base in opposition to the new 5-Star-Democratic Party government that took office this month after his failed move to force new elections landed the League as the head of Italy’s opposition and deprived him of his bully pulpit as the hard-line antimigran­t interior minister.

“I expect (Salvini) will continue to be an effective force because the issues he gained credibilit­y for — migration, taxes and security — remain salient,” said Roberto D’Alimonte, a political science professor at Rome’s LUISS University. “And if the (new) government does not address these issues, Salvini’s strength will remain pretty much the same.”

The League remains the most popular party in Italy, and the League voters attending the Pontida pilgrimage made clear they were behind their “captain.”

Many in the crowd placed the blame for Salvini’s fate on the grassroots 5-Star Movement for quickly realigning itself from its League coalition to form a new government with the one-time enemy, the center-left Democratic Party. They branded Premier Giuseppe Conte, head of both government­s, a traitor.

Luca Carminati, a laborer from nearby Bergamo, said he switched from voting for the center-right to the League five years ago. He said he has seen his boss struggling to keep a small business afloat in the face of high taxation and bureaucrac­y.

“I like Salvini because he is the only one that fights the idea of a European Union, which I do not support, because I believe the European bureaucrat­s do not do Italy any good,” Carminati said. Salvini “is trying to give value to the Italian people again.“

During his speech Salvini muted his often-fiery tones, urging supporters to be patient and polite in their political discourse. This came after a League lawmaker from Veneto drew fire for insulting Italy’s president a day earlier. Still, speakers who took the stage before Salvini spoke of revolution and resistance, and the rank-and-file verbally attacked Italian leftist journalist Gad Lerner, who was flanked by police bodyguards. Lerner has often clashed with Salvini.

Salvini also hit a euro-skeptic note as he warned Italy’s European allies in shaky French, German and English that “the Italian people are no one’s servant.”

Speaking to his base, Salvini said he would make a long-sought flattax of 15% a priority if he lands back in government and that in the meantime he would take the fight against migration to the level of local and regional government­s,

where the League has long prospered. He railed against Islam, burqas and pressed for more regional autonomy from Rome.

D’Alimonte noted a subtle and recent shift in Salvini when he acknowledg­ed that the new government is formally legitimate under the parliament­ary system. D’Alimonte said the position indicated “he wants to play by the rules,” though it remains to be seen if that sticks.

Salvini needs to demonstrat­e even more profound change if he wants to return to power, said analyst Stefano Folli of La Repubblica. His political stumble has challenged his image as “a winner,” and his associatio­n with extreme-right parties in France and Germany has flagged him a threat to Europe.

“Salvini is an extreme-right danger that Europe cannot accept. If he maintains that position, he finishes his story,” Folli said. “If he can change — which requires a deep cultural shift and a complicate­d political journey — and becomes an element of the conservati­ve right in the European dynamic, he could return to government.”

 ?? Photograpg­h: AP ?? Revelers celebrate as fireworks explode over the Metropolit­an Cathedral after President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador gave the annual independen­ce shout from the balcony of the National Palace to kick off Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns, in Mexico City. Every year the Mexican president marks the “Grito de Dolores,” commemorat­ing the 1810 call to arms by priest Miguel Hidalgo that began the struggle for independen­ce from Spain, achieved in 1821.
Photograpg­h: AP Revelers celebrate as fireworks explode over the Metropolit­an Cathedral after President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador gave the annual independen­ce shout from the balcony of the National Palace to kick off Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns, in Mexico City. Every year the Mexican president marks the “Grito de Dolores,” commemorat­ing the 1810 call to arms by priest Miguel Hidalgo that began the struggle for independen­ce from Spain, achieved in 1821.
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