Factbox-As Italian PM Draghi resigns, what risks being left undone?
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[July 21, 2022]
ROME (Reuters) - Italian Prime Minister
Mario Draghi resigned on Thursday after his national unity government
fell apart, setting the country on course for an early election in
September or October and hitting financial markets.
Following are some of the measures that could be impacted by the
government crisis.
SUPPORT FOR UKRAINE
Draghi helped to shape Europe's tough response to Russia's invasion of
Ukraine, angering Moscow.
Draghi remains in office in a caretaker capacity and the government is
allowed to send arms to Ukraine until the end of this year thanks to a
bill approved in parliament earlier this year, a senior government
source told Reuters.
MEASURES TO MITIGATE RISING ENERGY COSTS
Before the crisis erupted, the Italian Treasury was working on a new
stimulus package worth at least 10 billion euros ($10.2 billion) to help
families and firms cope with surging energy costs, government officials
have said.
Several ministers said the government still planned to approve the
scheme by early August.
RECOVERY AND RESILIENCE FUND (PNRR)
Italy is entitled to benefit from more than 200 billion euros in
post-pandemic recovery funds from the European Union until 2026, but
must pass a series of incremental reforms to ensure the cash continues
to flow.
The government so far has secured almost 67 billion euros of EU funds.
Rome now needs to reach 55 new targets in the second half of 2022 to get
an additional tranche worth 19 billion euros, something that analysts
say might prove more difficult without Draghi at the helm.
Among the targets to be reached, Italy must by the end of this year
approve steps to promote competition in product and services markets.
This is triggering protests from lobby groups, especially taxi drivers
who demonstrated in Rome last week.
JUSTICE REFORM
Probably the most controversial of Draghi's 17-month premiership, the
justice reform aims to cut the length of trials by 25% over five years
in criminal cases and by 40% in civil ones, where the situation is even
worse. Critics say it risks allowing thousands of criminals to escape
justice by dropping cases when the appeal process drags on too long.
Before Draghi resigned, Justice Minister Marta
Cartabia promised the reform would still be completed in the second half
of this year.
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Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi arrives to address 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
BUDGET 2023
Italy has not had an autumn election for a century because this is
traditionally when parliament passes the budget law for the
following year.
If parliament fails to approve the budget by December, spending in
the first four months of the following year is allocated
automatically, month by month, on the basis of a draft budget
outlined by the Treasury in October.
SALE OF ITA AIRWAYS
It is unclear how Draghi's resignation could affect the planned sale
of a majority stake in state-owned airline ITA Airways, the
successor to Alitalia.
Shipping group MSC has filed an offer together with Germany's
Lufthansa. They faced a rival bid from U.S. financial investor
Certares which was working with Air France-KLM and Delta Air Lines.
MONTE DEI PASCHI FUNDING
A strategic goal of the Treasury under Draghi's administration is to
help state-controlled bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MPS) to raise
2.5 billion euros in cash by mid November via a new share issue.
A vote in the autumn will likely unnerve markets, making it harder
for the lender to tap private investors for the part of the capital
raising which is not covered by the state, bankers say.
ITALY'S UNIFIED BROADBAND NETWORK
State lender Cassa Depositi e Prestiti (CDP) is in talks with
Telecom Italia (TIM) over a plan to create a unified broadband
operator by combining TIM's fixed network infrastructure with that
of state backed rival Open Fiber.
CDP, which holds a 60% stake in Open Fiber, said on Sunday the
project was industrially viable and talks between the parties would
continue despite the political crisis.
However, the far-right Brothers of Italy party, which is likely to
emerge as the largest single party in the next parliament, is
calling for CDP to stop talks with TIM, party lawmaker Alessio Butti
told Reuters.
($1 = 0.9819 euros)
(Reporting by Giuseppe Fonte; Editing by Alison Williams)
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