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‘Agree to our programme or go to the polls’: M5S warns Italy’s coalition deal could yet collapse

Italy's anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) warned on Friday that its tentative coalition deal with the centre-left Democratic Party could still fall apart.

'Agree to our programme or go to the polls': M5S warns Italy's coalition deal could yet collapse
Luigi Di Maio, head of Italy's Five Star Movement. Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP

M5S chief Luigi Di Maio said “either we are in agreement on carrying through the points of our (M5S) programme, or we stop here”.

Should the Democratic Party (PD) — which was the Movement's bitter enemy until just a couple of weeks ago — not agree to the M5S's key policy demands, “it would be better to go back to the polls as soon as possible,” he said.

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Di Maio's warning followed consultations with premier-designate Giuseppe Conte, who has been tasked with forming a new government following the collapse of Italy's populist coalition earlier this month.

“We're not looking at a government just to get by, we consider some of the points of our programme indispensable,” he said.

The PD's reaction was swift and sharp, with Graziano Delrio, the party's lower house leader, insisting it was “committed to loyally supporting the efforts of Prime Minister Conte. This effort alone has already restored confidence in Italy.”

“Di Maio's ultimatums to the premier designate are completely unacceptable,” he said.

'Bellicose'

Conte met with all Italy's main parties on Friday as he raced to ensure his coalition would have the necessary working majority.

Political watchers have said Di Maio, 33, is fighting for his political life after the previous M5S-League coalition saw him reduced to an extra in what essentially became hard-right interior minister Matteo Salvini's show. Di Maio has reportedly demanded he be kept on as deputy prime minister — something the PD is set against.

PROFILE: Italy's PM Conte, the 'Mr Nobody' who found his voice


Premier-designate Giuseppe Conte arrives at the Senate on Friday. Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP

“Luigi's most bellicose advisors are entertaining the idea of pulling the rug on the deal if the negotiations for cabinet posts go badly for their chief,” Simone Canettieri wrote in the Messaggero newspaper on Friday.

Canettieri said that Di Maio was sending “clear warnings” to Conte, including his insistence that any programme accord between the M5S and PD would have to be voted on online by the Movement's members. That vote is expected to take place only once Conte has unveiled his team next week.

The M5S is flexing its muscles because it was the biggest winner in last year's general election, with more than 33 percent of the vote, while the PD came in second with nearly 19 percent.

Technocrats?

Michiel van der Veen, an economist with RaboResearch, warned that “plenty of (M5S) voters are expected to oppose a tie-up, while Five Star also wants technocrats in important ministerial positions rather than the PD's preferred option of politicians”.

The parties are also divided on issues such as migration laws and a high-speed railway between Italy and France.

Milan's stock market sunk into the red over Friday's tensions. In the government bond market, the “spread” between Italy's bond yields and those of rock-solid Germany widened, indicating that investors were demanding a higher risk premium in return for investing in Italian sovereign debt.

READ ALSO: Four key economic challenges facing Italy's new government

Salvini's League, the smaller, far-right Brothers of Italy party and former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's centre-right Forza Italia party have all insisted the country return immediately to the polls for fresh elections.

A Quorum Youtrend poll published by SkyTG24 on Friday found the League still far outstrips the other parties despite a recent decline, bagging 32 percent of voter intentions, compared to 22 percent for the PD and 19 for the M5S. Some 32 percent of those surveyed said they trusted Salvini, compared to 26 percent for Di Maio.

Should the talks break down, Italy could hold an election at the beginning of November. 

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POLITICS

Italy’s public TV journalists to strike over political influence

Journalists at Italy's RAI public broadcaster on Thursday announced a 24-hour walkout next month, citing concerns over politicisation under Giorgia Meloni's hard-right government.

Italy's public TV journalists to strike over political influence

The strike comes after Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama — who is close to Meloni — called a top RAI editor to complain about a television report into Italy’s controversial migration deal with his country.

The Usigrai trade union called the strike from May 6 to May 7 saying talks with management had failed to address their concerns.

It cited numerous issues, including staff shortages and contract issues, but in first place was “the suffocating control over journalistic work, with the attempt to reduce RAI to a megaphone for the government”.

It had already used that phrase to object to what critics say is the increasing influence over RAI by figures close to Prime Minister Meloni, who leads Italy’s most right-wing government since World War II.

However, another union of RAI journalists, Unirai, said they would not join what they called a “political” strike, defending the return to “pluralism” at the broadcaster.

Funded in part by a licence fee and with top managers long chosen by politicians, RAI’s independence has always been an issue of debate.

But the arrival in power of Meloni — leader of the far-right Brothers of Italy party, who formed a coalition with Matteo Salvini’s far-right League party and the late Silvio Berlusconi’s right-wing Forza Italia — redoubled concerns.

Tensions erupted at the weekend amid accusations RAI censored a speech by a leading writer criticising Meloni ahead of Liberation Day on April 25, when Italians mark the defeat of Fascism and the Nazis at the end of World War II.

Both RAI’s management and Meloni have denied censorship, and the premier posted the text of the monologue on her social media.

In another twist, Albania’s premier confirmed Thursday he called senior RAI editor Paolo Corsini about an TV report on Sunday into Italy’s plans to build two migration processing centres on Albanian territory.

Rama told La Stampa newspaper the report was “biased” and contained “lies” — adding that he had not raised the issue with Meloni.

The “Report” programme claimed the costs of migrant centres, which are under construction, were already “out of control” and raised questions about criminals benefiting from the project.

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