Italy PM Conte ‘faces pressure to move fast to strengthen majority’

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte gestures as he replies to questions ahead of a confidence vote at the Senate on January 19, 2021 at Palazzo Madama in Rome. (YARA NARDI / POOL / AFP)

ROME – Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte is under pressure from his coalition to quickly broaden his majority but has made little progress since narrowly surviving an attempt to sink the government, political sources said.

After scraping through a confidence vote in the Senate on Tuesday thanks to abstentions, Conte appealed to centrist and liberal lawmakers outside the coalition to join his government’s ranks. Few have responded and time is short.

After scraping through a confidence vote in the Senate on Tuesday thanks to abstentions, Conte appealed to centrist and liberal lawmakers outside the coalition to join his government’s ranks. Few have responded and time is short

Next week, the government faces a vote on an annual report on the justice system. If it loses, Conte will face more pressure to resign.

Former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, leader of the small Italia Viva party that triggered the crisis by quitting the ruling coalition, has said it will vote against the government rather than abstain as it did in the confidence vote.

Without an outright majority, Conte will be constantly vulnerable and will face a struggle to push through any contentious legislation as he tries to handle the coronavirus pandemic and an economic crisis.

ALSO READ: Italy's Conte survives close Senate vote, vows to forge ahead

Italy needs to present a convincing policy agenda to the European Commission, the European Union’s executive, to receive over 200 billion euros (US$242.94 billion) from the bloc’s economic Recovery Fund.

“In private conversations, many people say they would like to join us but they need time. We are not going to spend a month negotiating, they have to decide,” a senator who is involved in talks with the opposition, but asked not to be named, told Reuters.

Conte won Tuesday’s vote in the 321-seat Senate by 156-140, leaving him five short of an outright majority.

The tally included three unelected life senators who seldom attend sessions, so he needs at least eight more to be able to govern with confidence.

ALSO READ: Italy's Conte seeking stray senators to save struggling coalition

Two Italia Viva senators have suggested they could move back to the majority. There have been few expressions of interest from senators in other centrist and centre-right parties.

The co-ruling Democratic Party believes a group supporting the government must emerge in parliament “within the next few days”, a party source said, if Conte is to avoid tripping up in parliament and an election being called.

President Sergio Mattarella, the supreme arbiter of Italian politics, told Conte on Wednesday he needs to secure the support of a stable parliamentary group rather than various individual senators, a source familiar with the talks said.

If Conte succeeds, the group could potentially become the embryo of his own party.

READ MORE: 5-Star meltdown leaves Italy in chaos with leader set to quit

A new political force led by Conte, Italy’s most popular politician, could win about 16 percent of voter support, making it the second largest after the right-wing League, a survey this week by the SWG polling agency showed.

Previous post Trump’s Senate trial on hold as Democrats take control
Next post Govt still pursuing Sinovac vaccines: Sophia Chan