Draghi, who played a pivotal role in steering Europe out of its sovereign debt crisis, took on the mandate of premier-designate with conditions — a normal procedure in Italian politics — after meeting head of state Sergio Mattarella at the presidential palace in Rome, secretary-general Ugo Zampetti told reporters.
Draghi, 73, will sound out leaders of political parties as he tries to forge as broad a parliamentary majority as possible. Outgoing Premier Giuseppe Conte failed in a comeback bid following the defection of a junior ally and Mattarella turned to Draghi after warning Italy could not afford to go through an election campaign amid the current crisis.
The country’s parties are divided on a Draghi-led government. He can count on the backing of the center-left Democratic Party, the second-biggest force in Conte’s former alliance, as well as centrist, pro-European groups. The center-right Forza Italia party of ex-Premier Silvio Berlusconi could also support Draghi, although its lawmakers are divided.
Matteo Salvini, leader of the anti-migrant League, the biggest party in the center-right bloc, has left the door ajar for a Draghi government. “The problem isn’t the name of the person,” Salvini told daily Corriere della Sera. “The point is what he wants to do and with whom.” Salvini said the priority for Italy should be to avoid tax increases, and reiterated his call for early elections in May or June.
But the Five Star Movement, the biggest force in parliament and Conte’s main backer in the last government, has refused to support Draghi. Vito Crimi, political leader of the group born as an anti-establishment force, said past administrations led by technocrats had created “extremely negative consequences for Italian citizens.”
The ever-fractious Five Star could, however, find itself split over the issue, with some lawmakers possibly agreeing to back Draghi.
Draghi Agenda
If Draghi is confirmed as premier, his agenda will be dominated by the pandemic — which has caused almost 90,000 deaths in Italy — and a faltering vaccination campaign. He’ll also have to come to grips with a debt-plagued economy that shrank 2% in the last quarter of 2020, the worst performance among large European countries.
Another key item on the agenda: how to manage and spend the country’s 209 billion-euro ($252 billion) share of the European Union’s recovery package, the issue which led ex-Premier Matteo Renzi to pull the plug on Conte’s government.
A trained economist, Draghi is credited with shoring up the euro at the height of the debt crisis in 2012 with his “Whatever it takes” speech. He started the quantitative-easing program of sovereign debt purchases which has subsequently been expanded to become a key tool in supporting the European economy during the pandemic.
Draghi ended his eight years as the helm of the ECB in 2019, and ever since he’s kept pundits guessing on whether he’d consider a role in Italian politics.
Possible finance ministers in a Draghi-led cabinet include Fabio Panetta, an ECB executive board member, and Carlo Cottarelli, a former International Monetary Fund executive who nearly became premier himself in 2018, daily la Repubblica reported on Wednesday.
(Updates with political situation from fourth paragraph.)
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Source: Economy - investing.com