Italy was plunged into fresh political turmoil this week as prime minister Mario Draghi announced his resignation after the Five Star Movement (M5S) — the second-largest member of his “national unity” coalition — boycotted a parliamentary vote of confidence.
Officially, the party, led by former prime minister Giuseppe Conte, walked out because the bill included plans to build a waste incinerator to address Rome’s garbage crisis, which the M5S has always opposed for environmental concerns; it also accused the government of not doing enough to combat poverty.
Despite comfortably winning the vote in the Senate, Draghi reacted by immediately announcing his resignation, saying that the “national unity coalition that has supported this government since its creation no longer exists” and lamenting that “the pact of trust” between allies had been broken.
However, in a bid to avoid snap elections, president Sergio Mattarella — the real powerbroker of Italian post-democracy — has rejected Draghi’s resignation, insisting he address parliament next Wednesday (July 20) for “an assessment of the situation”. Until then, the government will be hanging in a limbo. After that, several scenarios are possible.
One option is that Draghi stays where he is — either because he manages to convince the M5S to come back into the fold (Conte made it clear that the party was voting against the bill, not the government) or because Mattarella convinces him to continue serving as prime minister even without the Five Star Movement’s support. After all, even without the latter, Draghi would still be able to count on a huge majority.
If, on the other hand, Draghi confirms his resignation, the ball would pass to Mattarella, who would be faced with the choice of either trying to find a replacement prime minister until the end of the parliamentary term in May 2023, or calling for early elections later this year — the latter being the preferred option by Right-wingers Giorgia Meloni and Matteo Salvini.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
SubscribeThe problem with Italy is lack of growth from the day it joined the €. Plus the unchallenged imposed migration that disorient people and kept wages even lower . The exit from the € is the answer . It’s hard but country saving
His jumping ship could easily be characterised as “doing a Cameron”.
How, even in Italy, can you refuse to accept a man’s resignation?
Italian institutions and public life are full of things like that where you sort of have to blink and read twice. Read this on its justice system … https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/italy-sharpens-guillotine-cut-europes-slowest-trials-2022-07-13/
Many thanks for that reference. Very interesting article which should be mainstream news, but isn’t, because it cant be shoehorned into the usual repetitive bs.
when the resignee is made an offer which he or she finds difficult, or even impossible, to refuse.
A dead horse in your bed? Blimey!
5-star could have been a transformative movement, but they made a fatal mistake by going in with the PD a couple of years ago. Unfortunately, it is too late for them now.
Could you please post links to verified data to support your claims about falling wages, record-level poverty, hundred of thousand of bankrupts of SMEs?
“An affront the idea of governing only with the support of 70%…” or perhaps the lucid acknowledgement that he would be hostage of all other supporting parties?
“Mass unemployment”? Unemployment rate has declined. See for yourself: https://formatresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Disoccupazione-3-03032022-BP-EN-Eurostat-Ing.pdf
“Skyrocketing inflation” is a common problem all across Europe
“Dragged a nation into a war…”. Ah ok! I finally get it.
Sorry for wasting your/my time.
Fazi maybe guilty of hyperbole but don’t underestimate the level of hatred that Draghi inspires. In my part of Italy good communists are considering voting for Meloni in an attempt to get rid of Draghi and all he represents. Mind blowing.
I’m happy to read this article about Draghi. In the Netherlands we have a very one-sided press.
I could use a good tutorial about the Italian situation. Does Draghi really have the support of 70% of the Parliament? That’s amazing; filibuster-proof with room to spare!
Also, what is an SME?
Small and medium size enterprises
Italy faces a choice between a government run by an ultra neo liberal and bunch of self described fascists but hey that’s democracy.