Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Italians defy coronaviru­s for vote

A triumph for the far-right in this fiercely fought campaign would sound alarm bells in Brussels

-

ROME, Italy (AFP) — Italians head to the polls Sunday — to the alarm of coronaviru­s experts — for a referendum and regional elections that could weaken the government and radically reshape the political landscape.

Just a week after a Herculean effort by schools to reopen in line with last-minute COVID-19 rules, classrooms across the country will be shut to pupils and transforme­d into ballot stations for the two-day vote.

A triumph for the far-right in this fiercely fought campaign would sound alarm bells in

Brussels.

It will be the first test for Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte’s centre-left coalition government since it imposed an economical­ly crippling nationwide lockdown to fight the virus, which has killed almost 36,000 people.

The referendum, on slashing the number of members of parliament — from 630 to 400 in the lower house, and 315 to 200 in the upper house — is expected to pass, though there has been a late uptick in the number of prominent ‘no’ declaratio­ns.

The cost-cutting reform is the brainchild of the co-governing Five Star Movement (M5S), but while its centre-left coalition Democratic Party (PD) partner and parties on the right are theoretica­lly in favour, their support has been lacklustre at best.

The regional battle is for governance of Campania, Liguria, Marche, Puglia, Tuscany, Valle d’Aosta and Veneto.

The right-wing coalition is set to easily retake Veneto and Liguria, and it could also snatch Marche and Puglia from the left.

But all eyes will be on Tuscany, a historic left-wing stronghold that might fall to Matteo Salvini’s far-right League.

“If the left performs particular­ly poorly... Brussels will grow concerned,” Berenberg economist Florian Hense told

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines