Miami Herald

Sicily vote provides test for Italy elections

- BY COLLEEN BARRY

MILAN — Sicilian elections have provided a key testing ground for Italy’s political parties before national elections in the spring to replace the technical government of Premier Mario Monti.

Ten candidates were vying for governor of one of Italy’s most important regions in Sunday’s election, which was called following the resignatio­n of Gov. Raffaele Lombardo amid concerns that the region risked insolvency and following his indictment on charges of Mafia associatio­n. He has denied the charges.

The region of about 5 million inhabitant­s and with an unemployme­nt rate of nearly 20 percent is considered a barometer for national elections.

Italian political parties are jockeying for strategies to retake power in Rome when the mandate for Monti’s government expires.

Monti, who took power last year tasked with shielding Italy from the debt crisis, has said he will not run for another term, but has said he would be open to a second term under certain circumstan­ces, which analysts have said would mean if no party wins a clear mandate or can put together a majority.

On the center-left, the Democratic Party and the centrist Union of the Center Party have united behind one candidate, testing sentiment for a possible repeat in the national elections.

Former Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Liberty Party, damaged by political scandals in the regions of Lazio and Lombardy, also is seeking to invigorate itself. On the eve of the vote and just days after saying he would not run in the spring for premier, the 76-year-old Berlusconi threatened to withdraw support for Monti’s policies.

Berlusconi

was

con- victed Friday of tax fraud, and sentenced to four years in jail.

The sentence is not definitive until two levels of appeals are exhausted, which his lawyers have vowed to pursue.

Meanwhile, the populist Five Star Movement launched by comic Beppe Grillo is proving a threat to the traditiona­l center-right and center-left parties.

 ?? CARMELO IMBESI/AP ?? A man looks at an electoral poster for the Five Star Movement, which is proving a threat to the traditiona­l center-right and center-left parties, in Catania, on the island of Sicily, Italy.
CARMELO IMBESI/AP A man looks at an electoral poster for the Five Star Movement, which is proving a threat to the traditiona­l center-right and center-left parties, in Catania, on the island of Sicily, Italy.

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