Italian president sets last-ditch talks on forming new govt
ROME — Italy’s president has summoned the country’s bickering political leaders to a single day of talks on Monday to seek a way out of a two-month political impasse.
President Sergio Mattarella’s office said Thursday that the latest round of talks to develop a government coalition between the populist 5-Star Movement and the centre-left Democratic Party had “faded.” He said after five rounds of talks “no prospective of a government majority has emerged.”
Reports have suggested that Mattarella could resort to appointing a “truce” government to lead Italy through 2018 to pass the budget, and hold a new election in 2019.
A centre-right coalition won 37 per cent of Italy’s March 4 vote and the anti-establishment, populist 5-Stars nabbed 32 per cent. But the 5-Stars have refused to govern with ex-Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia, a key member of the centre-right coalition.