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Resignation of Italy’s PM

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August 23, 2019

Why in news?

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte resigned after disagreements within the government; he, however, continues to be the caretaker PM.

How did the Conte government come to power?

  • In the March 2018 parliamentary elections, an anti-incumbent vote helped the Five Star Movement and the League party get the most number of seats in the country’s legislature.
  • Notably, both are non-mainstream political groupings.
  • Both Five Star Movement and the League Party ran on an anti-establishment agenda during the elections.
  • No party got majority in the elections, and so, it was planned to keep the incumbent parties away and offer a populist alternative.
  • Thus, in June 2018, both groups came together to form the government with Conte as Prime Minister.
  • [Conte was relatively unknown before the 2018 national elections.
  • However, he became the country’s leader after the Five Star Movement and the League party sought a compromise candidate to lead their coalition.]
  • Luigi Di Maio and Matteo Salvini, leaders of the Five Star Movement and the League party, respectively, were made as Deputy Prime Ministers.

What led to Conte’s resignation?

  • The coalition was more an opportunistic alliance between a far-right nativist party and a professed ideology-less anti-establishment group.
  • The 5-Star Movement lacked any ideological alternative to offer other than its anger towards Italy’s centre-left and conservative establishment parties.
  • Serious disagreements emerged between the coalition parties while in government.
  • Opinion polls suggested that the League Party could get up to 38% of the popular vote if polls are held soon.
  • Mr. Salvini is thus on course to become Prime Minister.
  • The current crisis was thus triggered by Mr. Salvini’s decision to withdraw from the coalition.
  • Eventually, Conte tendered his resignation without waiting for a no-confidence motion.

Who is Matteo Salvini?

  • The leader of the League Party, Salvini, was the interior minister in the short-lived government.
  • The rebel leader has consistently promoted his party’s rhetoric which is championing US President Trump and Russian President Putin while attacking the European Union.
  • He pushed for his party’s “Italy-first”, anti-immigrant, anti-EU agenda.
  • Salvini has a fiercely anti-immigrant stance and has called the intake of refugees as “organised migration”.
  • As Interior Minister, he banned migrant ships.
  • He also challenged the EU fiscal orthodoxy by calling for tax cuts and spending rises.
  • This appealed to the electorate still suffering under the effects of the debt crisis.
  • Salvini has now reportedly become significantly more popular than before the elections.
  • He is thus expected to lead the next Italian government.

What does this imply?

  • Mr. Salvini’s rise, from a regional leader in northern Italy to a popular nationalist political figure now, is also the story of Italy’s political and economic crisis.
  • When establishment parties shy away from addressing structural economic issues, the crisis opens avenues for anti-establishment forces.
  • In effect, Italy’s political centre is crumbling; the Left is weak.
  • The 5-Star Movement does not have an ideological programme.
  • Mr. Salvini, whose hard nationalist views echo the far-right politics on the ascent in Europe, seems determined to exploit the Italian crisis.

What next?

  • Now, President Sergio Mattarella alone has the power to dissolve the parliament.
  • He will be forced to do so only if there is no way for the government to continue.
  • But most parties currently in Parliament, except the League, fear that an early election would turn the tide against them.
  • So, the chances are high that Salvini would come to power.
  • On the other hand, if the Conte government has to survive, the Five Star Movement will have to find support from other political groupings in Parliament.

 

Source: Indian Express, The Hindu

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