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Italy is struggling for the future of Prime Minister Draghi

2022-07-15T03:26:32.600Z


Italy is struggling for the future of Prime Minister Draghi Created: 07/15/2022, 05:01 Rome in crisis: what's next for Prime Minister Mario Draghi? © Roberto Monaldo/LaPresse via ZUMA Press/dpa Prime Minister Draghi submits his resignation, the President refuses. Now there should be a vote of confidence in Parliament. Some parties position themselves clearly. Rome - In Italy, the parties are l


Italy is struggling for the future of Prime Minister Draghi

Created: 07/15/2022, 05:01

Rome in crisis: what's next for Prime Minister Mario Draghi?

© Roberto Monaldo/LaPresse via ZUMA Press/dpa

Prime Minister Draghi submits his resignation, the President refuses.

Now there should be a vote of confidence in Parliament.

Some parties position themselves clearly.

Rome - In Italy, the parties are looking for a way out of the government crisis.

President Sergio Mattarella rejected a resignation request from Prime Minister Mario Draghi on Thursday evening.

The 74-year-old now faces a vote of confidence in Parliament.

There it should be clarified whether Draghi's multi-party government still has a solid majority after a scandal surrounding the Five Star Movement.

The government voted both for a continuation and for new elections.

As has been heard from government circles, next Wednesday has been set as the date for the parliamentary debate.

The Mediterranean country, which was already shaken by a drought and energy crisis, is five days ago tugging about the future of the man who was still celebrated in 2021 - also internationally - as a big political winner.

Parties position themselves

It has been clear in Rome since Thursday evening who is for and who is against Draghi.

The Social Democrats and Center parties spoke out in favor of continuing the government of the 74-year-old.

Far-right Fratelli d'Italia call for immediate elections;

the right-wing Lega and Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia - who, unlike the Fratelli, are represented in the government - could also make friends with it.

The five stars of ex-Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte had provoked Draghi's resignation when they voted in confidence in the Senate - the smaller of the two chambers of Parliament - on an aid decree of around 26 billion euros for Italian families because of the consequences of the Ukraine war and high energy prices stayed away.

Draghi saw no more basis for a cooperation.

President Mattarella rejects Draghi's resignation

President Mattarella, who appointed the former head of the European Central Bank (ECB) as an independent expert in winter 2021, refused his resignation.

Instead, he asked Draghi to clarify in parliament whether he could still gather a majority behind him.

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"Now we have five days to work for Parliament to vote for the Draghi government and for Italy to get out of this dramatic spiral into which it has slipped in the last few hours as quickly as possible," tweeted Enrico Letta, party leader of the Partito Democratico.

Matteo Renzi from the small Italia Viva party, who, like Letta himself, was once prime minister, also promised Draghi his support for the continuation of the government.

Right-wing parties are hoping for new elections

The right-wing parties, however, sense their chances in new elections - above all the right-wing extremist Fratelli d'Italia, which is currently the strongest party in polls, tied with the Social Democrats.

"With Draghi's resignation, this legislative period is over for the Fratelli d'Italia," said party leader Giorgia Meloni.

Lega said: "It is unthinkable that Italy should freeze for weeks in a dramatic moment like this.

Nobody needs to be afraid of giving the floor to the Italians.” Berlusconi had already said before the vote of confidence that he and Forza Italia would not be afraid of an early return to the ballot box.

The parties on both the left and right were largely in agreement on one thing: that the Five Star Movement irresponsibly plunged the country into the crisis.

How things will continue with the populists - who were still the clear winners in the 2018 elections - is completely open.

Italy's Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio said in a TV interview in the evening that his "heart bleeds" when he sees a man like ex-President Dmitry Medvedev in autocratic Russia rejoicing "because one of the strongest democracies in the world has been weakened in Italy became".

Di Maio recently left the Five Star Movement.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-07-15

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