Conte accepts mandate to form new govt
ROME - Italian President Sergio Mattarella asked Giuseppe Conte to head a coalition of the 5-Star Movement and opposition Democratic Party, or PD, on Thursday, a move could that could mark a turning point in Italy's frayed relations with the European Union.
Mattarella handed Conte a fresh mandate to form a cabinet barely a week after the low-key lawyer had resigned following a decision by the far-right League party to pull out of its coalition with 5-Star.
The move by its leader Matteo Salvini, who had wanted early elections to capitalize on his party's success in European elections, appeared to have backfired as 5-Star and the PD set aside their mutual antipathy to form a government led by Conte.
"In the coming days I will return to the president of the republic, ...and submit my proposals for ministers," Conte said after leaving the presidential palace.
The soft-spoken academic, who has no political affiliation but is considered close to 5-Star, adding that work on the 2020 budget was his priority.
In an early, basic draft of a coalition policy platform, the two sides would ask the EU for flexibility on the 2020 budget deficit to "reinforce social cohesion" in the country, financial daily Il Sole 24 Ore said on Thursday.
The EU imposes budget rules on member states with the aim of ensuring financial stability in the bloc. It has had a testy relationship with Rome under the outgoing administration, with League leader Salvini blaming the EU rules for impoverishing Italians.
Unsustainable pressure
Salvini had promised sweeping tax cuts for 2020 that economists warned could put unsustainable pressure on Italy's towering debt mountain.
The prospect of a new administration led by Conte has buoyed markets, which are betting that Italy will get a fiscally prudent government that will avoid confrontation with Europe.
However, a coalition pact is not yet a done deal and the incoming coalition still needs to agree on a shared policy platform and team of ministers.
Investors and markets have welcomed the likely return to political stability in the eurozone's third largest economy, with Italy's 10-year bond yield falling to a record low on Wednesday.
But analysts have warned the deal between the 5-Star - which had sworn never to ally with traditional parties - and the center-left, which has long loathed it, could quickly crumble.
"Any new government formed by these unlikely bedfellows has the potential to be a fairly short-lived affair, given that the onus will now fall on a new administration to implement new European Union-mandated spending reductions of up to 23 billion euros this autumn," said Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets UK.
Agencies
(China Daily 08/30/2019 page12)