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Sun, January 29, 2023 | 18:35
Andrew Hammond
'Super Mario' in trouble as Italy's government wobbles
Posted : 2022-07-19 16:45
Updated : 2022-07-19 17:16
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By Andrew Hammond

Following fast on the heels of the fall of U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, his Italian counterpart Mario Draghi tendered his resignation on Thursday night.

While Draghi's offer to quit was refused, for now, by Italy's President Sergio Mattarella, the government could yet collapse soon. In the words of Draghi on Thursday, "the mood of national unity, which supported this government since its inception, no longer exists" and his 17-month-old administration is therefore in limbo with its survival tested by increasingly sharp divergences within the broad coalition.

Draghi has governed with the support of virtually all of Italy's main parties, with the exception of the fast-rising Brothers of Italy party. That far-right organization, which has been riding a wave of increasing popularity and is now polling at 22 percent, is a deeply Euroskeptic, nationalist party and its leader, Giorgia Meloni, has now called for an early election that she hopes will be her springboard to becoming Italy's first female prime minister.

Coming in the midst of the Ukraine conflict and wider economic and political crises, Draghi's departure would be a body blow to Italy and Europe at large. He became Italy's sixth prime minister in only 10 years when he took over in February 2021 and among his achievements has been keeping Italy on track with reforms that the EU has made a condition for the country to receive 200 billion euros in pandemic recovery assistance.

Draghi is the widely respected former head of the European Central Bank, the leading central banker of his generation, where he earned the nickname "Super Mario" after the hero in one of Nintendo's video games. He made his reputation in 2012, in particular, when the future of the European single currency was in peril pledging massive intervention to defend the euro in what was perhaps the decisive moment of the economic crisis.

The reason the latest bout of political turmoil is being so closely watched is the specter of a new wave of political paralysis in this key G7 nation which has the third-largest economy in the eurozone. Draghi said he would resign after a hitherto key coalition ally, the populist Five Star Movement, appeared to pull its support for the government on Thursday, as did two other significant parties, Forza Italy and The League, on Sunday.

Five Star was the largest winner in the 2018 elections hauling in 33 percent of the overall vote. However, it has lost significant support in recent local elections and slumped in opinion polls to low double digits.

Only a few weeks ago it split in two, with Draghi's strong support for Ukraine after Russia's invasion a driving force in splintering Five Star, with some members of the populist party remaining opposed to arming Ukraine. It was this issue that prompted Foreign Minister Luigi di Maio to lead an exodus from the party he once headed, saying now was the time to support "European and Atlanticist values," accusing party leader ― and former prime minister ― Giuseppe Conte of weakening Italy's international standing.

On Thursday, Mattarella turned down Draghi's resignation and told him to address Parliament this coming week, probably on Wednesday, to get a clearer picture and see if he can still command a majority. He may have enough support to do just that from key parties, including the Social Democrats and ex-Prime Minister Matteo Renzi's Italy Alive party, but it is unclear whether the far-right League party of Matteo Salvini will remain on board, or continue to call for early elections.

However, Draghi had previously said he would only lead a national unity government, and would not continue without Five Star. If the impasse can't be resolved, the president may find a caretaker leader, or dissolve parliament and call an election as early as September or October.

The reason why the crisis is so badly timed is not just the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. Moreover, there are growing doubts about Italy's ability to pass its budget in the autumn and enact key reforms on which dispersal of the EU funds depends, including from the EU's 750 billion euro pandemic recovery fund of which Italy is the largest single recipient.

Moreover, the nation has wider systemic importance in having the biggest debt load in the single currency area, and its banking sector is under significant stress, with massive under-performing loans. There are concerns that if Italy gets into further economic trouble it could spark contagion that leads to a sovereign debt crisis across Europe. Investors are increasingly questioning whether some eurozone countries can continue to roll over their public debts, which have grown significantly during the pandemic and are becoming more expensive to refinance.

If Draghi's government falls in the coming days, the next administration may well be weak, unstable and incapable of securing the structural reforms the country badly needs in 2022 and beyond. With such renewed uncertainty in a nation where there have been more than 65 national governments in the post-war era, concerns are therefore again intensifying in Europe, and indeed beyond in the wider Western alliance, about the nation's future governance.


Andrew Hammond (andrewkorea@outlook.com) is an associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.


 
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