Italy government: Salvini calls for snap election

  09 August 2019    Read: 1707
 Italy government: Salvini calls for snap election

Matteo Salvini, leader of Italy's League party, has called for a snap election, saying differences with coalition partners cannot be mended, AzVision.az reported citing BBC News. 

A failed attempt by the Five Star Movement to derail plans for a high-speed rail link showed the coalition could no longer govern, he said.

Five Star leader Luigi Di Maio said his party did not fear another election.

Mr Salvini's party is well ahead in opinion polls, due mainly to his stance against illegal immigration.

In last year's election, Five Star won twice as many votes as The League, but polls suggest the proportions have been reversed.

Giuseppe Conte, the non-party law professor who serves as the coalition's prime minister, has said Mr Salvini must "justify" to parliament his call for an election.

Political clashes over the project for a railway between the Italian city of Turin and French city of Lyon led Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte to put tenders on hold in March.

The multibillion-euro TAV (Treno Alta Velocità) link involves digging a 58km (36-mile) tunnel through the Alps.

It is bitterly opposed by Five Star on environmental and cost grounds.

The League argues that it would create jobs and stimulate economic growth, and that moving freight from road to rail is environmentally friendly.

Supporters of the project say it would halve the travel time between the two cities to just two hours. The tunnel would also make it possible to travel from Paris to Milan in around four hours, down from nearly seven.

The project was launched 20 years ago and part of it has already been dug. It is scheduled for completion in 2025.

Costs were initially projected to hit €8.6bn ($9.7bn; £7.4bn), but Italy's Transport Minister Danilo Toninelli - a Five Star member - put the price tag at over €20bn.

The EU pledged to fund up to 40% of the cost.]

"Let's go straight to parliament to say there is no longer a majority... and quickly go back to the voters," Mr Salvini, who is both deputy prime minister and interior minister, said on Thursday.

Mr Di Maio, who is also a deputy prime minister, countered by declaring in a statement: "We are ready, we don't care in the least about occupying government posts and we never have."

While the League is the junior party in the coalition, it came first in the European elections in May, taking more than a third of the vote.

It has been in an uneasy coalition with Five Star, which came to power on an anti-establishment ticket.

Mr Salvini's demand for an election does not necessarily mean a poll will be called in the near future.

President Sergio Mattarella could theoretically appoint a government of technocrats and postpone a new election until next year.


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