Draghi demands Italian unity as price for staying on as PM
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[July 20, 2022]
By Giuseppe Fonte and Crispian Balmer
ROME (Reuters) - Italian Prime Minister
Mario Draghi on Wednesday demanded unity among his coalition partners if
they wanted him to stay in office, leaving his resignation threat
hanging over parliament.
Draghi set out a series of issues facing Italy ranging from the war in
Ukraine to social inequality and rising prices, and said political
parties needed to get behind him if he was to steer the country to
elections due in the first half of 2023.
"Are the parties and you parliamentarians ready to rebuild this pact?"
Draghi said in an uncompromising speech to the upper house, adding that
was what Italians were demanding.
Senators from the populist 5-Star Movement, which triggered the crisis
last week after refusing to support the government in a confidence vote,
did not clap at the end of the speech -- nor did many members of the
rightist League party.
Draghi tendered his resignation last week after 5-Star walk out, but
President Sergio Mattarella turned him down and told him to go back
before parliament to see if he could revive the 18-month-old
administration.
Senators will discuss Draghi's speech for several hours and the result
of a vote on his speech was expected by 7:30 p.m. (1730 GMT). A debate
on the government's future is also expected to take place at the lower
house on Thursday.
The former European Central Bank chief has enough backing to remain in
office without 5-Star, but he has so far rejected that option because
his original mandate was to lead a national unity coalition with parties
from across the political spectrum.
Complicating efforts to overcome the divisions, the League and its Forza
Italia allies have said they do not want to share power with 5-Star
anymore.
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Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi reacts during his address to the
Senate ahead of a confidence vote for the government after he
tendered his resignation last week in the wake of a mutiny by a
coalition partner, in Rome, Italy July 20, 2022. REUTERS/Guglielmo
Mangiapane
AUTUMN ELECTIONS
If Draghi decides the government can no longer continue, the
president is likely to call elections in September or October. Italy
has not had an autumn election since World War Two as that is the
period normally reserved for drawing up the budget.
Draghi addressed core concerns of the 5-Star, saying it was
important to tackle growing social inequality and pledging that the
government would move towards introducing a minimum salary.
He also indicated that he would act on some of the League's policy
priorities, such as cutting taxes and giving greater autonomy to the
regions. But he also said the country needed to take potentially
unpopular measures, such as boosting competition, that might run
counter to various lobby groups.
"Italy does not need a veneer of trust, which vanishes in front of
inconvenient measures. It needs a new pact of trust, sincere and
concrete," he told coalition partners.
It was far from clear whether 5-Star would rally behind his appeal.
It was also not clear if Draghi was prepared to continue with a
reduced majority should they leave.
"Draghi offered much more stick than carrot in this speech," said
Francesco Galietti, head of the political risk consultancy Policy
Sonar. "He indicated that he wanted to stay, but he also made clear
what he doesn't like about the current situation."
(Additional reporting by Angelo Amante, Writing by Keith Weir and
Crispian Balmer; Editing by Alison Williams)
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