Bloomberg
Three days after being sworn in, Italy’s new populist government is preparing for one final hurdle before it sets about trying to overhaul European Union rules and the established order: a confidence vote in both houses of parliament.
Parliamentary approval will be sought this week for the 18-member cabinet of Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, a 53-year-old law professor with no political experience. The anti-establishment Five Star Movement and the anti-immigrant League currently hold a majority in both houses, although in the 320-seat senate the two groups only have 14 votes more than the opposition.
Conte signalled his conviction that the votes will be no problem, saying in a Facebook post that he would hold a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the summit of Group of Seven nations in Canada on June 8-9.
While this first vote is likely to go smoothly as the parties have already agreed on the list of ministers and government programme, some analysts predict difficult times ahead in future parliamentary ballots as the two parties spar over which of their expensive electoral promises to keep first.
“The coalition parties have different constituencies and different requirements from the budget,†which could led to a renewed political crisis in the medium to short term, financier George Soros wrote in an op-ed published in Corriere della Sera.
“The government may well fall, so we may be facing elections later this year or more likely early next year.â€
Five Star leader Luigi Di Maio said a universal basic income for poorer Italians will be among the first measures he plans to put before the parliament. League’s leader Matteo Salvini, who has promised voters hefty tax cuts, said over the weekend that he plans to cut $5.8 billion worth of assistance to asylum seekers in order to recover funds to keep his electoral pledges.
Yet the sum is small compared with the implementation of the full Five Star and League programme, which also includes scrapping a pension reform that had helped balance Italy’s precarious finances during the economic crisis. Corriere della Sera estimated the cost of the populist programme at as much as 100 billion euros. That’s ambitious for Italy, which has the second highest debt burden in Europe after Greece, and one that could put it on a collision course with the euro-zone’s fiscal discipline.
The announcement of the government plan alarmed markets and sparked tensions with Italian President Sergio Mattarella, almost scuppering the chance of forming a government. The finance minister post went to economist Giovanni Tria, 69, calming markets, with Savona being made responsible for European affairs.
“The worst case scenario was avoided, but uncertainty remains,†Kepler Cheuvreux analyst Marco Baccaglio wrote in a note.