5-Star is the largest group in parliament following its triumph
at 2018 elections when it took 32% of the vote, but its support
has ebbed due to infighting and policy U-turns and it is now
polling at around 16%.
Conte, who opinion polls show is Italy's second most popular
politician after Prime Minister Mario Draghi having earned
widespread respect for guiding Italy through the worst of the
coronavirus crisis, was elected late on Friday after a two-day
online vote by the party's members.
Some 93% of those who voted answered yes to the question "are
you in favour of the election of professor Giuseppe Conte as
president of the 5-Star Movement." There were no other
candidates.
"The hard work of these last months has paid off and now we can
start from a solid base," Conte said on Facebook. He promised to
tour Italy from September to meet 5-Star supporters and gather
ideas for its programme.
5-Star is part of Draghi's national unity government but often
appears uneasy in the ruling coalition. In the most recent
example, after drawn-out negotiations it secured changes to a
reform of the justice system that had been backed by most of the
other parties.
Conte, a former law professor who previously had no party
affiliation, agreed to take the reins of 5-Star after his
coalition government collapsed seven months ago and he was
replaced by Draghi as premier.
He was asked to take charge by 73-year-old former comedian Beppe
Grillo, who founded 5-Star in 2009 as an anti-establishment
protest movement.
However, the former premier's appointment proved far more
problematic than expected as the two men argued over Grillo's
future role in the party, and at one point Conte appeared on the
verge of pulling out.
In recent years 5-Star has gradually abandoned its
anti-establishment roots and moved towards the centre-left
political mainstream.
(Reporting By Gavin Jones; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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