Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte To Offer Resignation As Government Wobbles

The Premier survived two confidence votes in Parliament last week but crucially lost his absolute majority in the Senate after an ally defected.

ROME (AP) — Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte intends to offer his resignation on Tuesday, his office said Monday, a move likely to be a gamble that the embattled leader will get a fresh mandate from the president to forge a more viable coalition.

Conte survived two confidence votes in Parliament last week but crucially lost his absolute majority in the Senate with the defection of a centrist ally, ex-Premier Matteo Renzi. That hobbled his government’s effectiveness in the middle of the pandemic, which has devastated Italy’s long-stagnant economy.

Conte’s office said Monday night that the premier will inform his Cabinet at a meeting Tuesday morning of his “will to go to the Quirinale (presidential palace) to hand in his resignation.”

Then Conte intends to head to the palace to meet with President Sergio Mattarella, who, as head of state, can accept the resignation, possibly asking the premier to try to form a more solid coalition that can command a majority in Parliament.

Mattarella could also reject the offer. But he has frequently stressed the need for the nation to have solid leadership as it struggles with the COVID-19 pandemic, with its devastating effects on Italy’s long-stagnant economy.

After consultations with leaders of both government and opposition parties, the president could also decide to tap someone else deemed to have better chances of forming a more solid government. If no one can forge a more viable, dependable coalition, Mattarella has the option of dissolving Parliament, setting the stage for an election two years early.

Conte has led a long-bickering center-left coalition for 16 months. Before that, for 15 months, he headed a government still with the populist 5-Star Movement, Parliament’s largest party, but in coalition with the right-wing League party of Matteo Salvini.

That first government collapsed when Salvini yanked his support in a failed bid to win the premiership for himself.

Key support could come from the centrist opposition party of former Premier Silvio Berlusconi. Just hours before the announcement by Conte’s office, the media mogul said he was trusting the “political wisdom” of Mattarella to indicate the way out of the crisis.

“The high road is one only,” Berlusconi said in a statement. That solution would be a “new government that would represent substantial unity of the country in a moment of emergency” or it could be a new election “to give back the (deciding) word to the Italian” voters.

By the end of February, the Italian government must inform the European Union how it intends to spend some 200 billion euros ($250 billion) in recovery funds, focused on reforming the country’s health and other institutional systems.

One of Renzi’s issues with Conte was what he contended was too much decision-making power concentrated in the premier’s hand on the funding programs.

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This Is How You Protest Italian Politics
(01 of07)
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Italian businessman Marcello De Finizio stands on the dome of St Peter's basilica to protest against austerity measures on May 20, 2013 at the Vatican. The businessman hung a banner saying: ' Stop this massacre, the political horror show is continue....help us Pope Francis... '. (FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
(02 of07)
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Italian businessman Marcello De Finizio stands on the dome of the St Peter's basilica to protest against austerity measures on May 20, 2013 at The Vatican. (FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
(03 of07)
Open Image Modal
Italian businessman Marcello De Finizio stands on the dome of the St Peter's basilica to protest against austerity measures on May 20, 2013 at The Vatican. (FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
(04 of07)
Open Image Modal
Italian businessman Marcello De Finizio stands on the dome of the St Peter's basilica to protest against austerity measures on May 20, 2013 at The Vatican. (FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
(05 of07)
Open Image Modal
Italian businessman Marcello De Finizio stands on the dome of the St Peter's basilica to protest against austerity measures on May 20, 2013 at The Vatican. (FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
(06 of07)
Open Image Modal
Italian businessman Marcello De Finizio stands on the dome of the St Peter's basilica to protest against austerity measures on May 20, 2013 at The Vatican. (FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
(07 of07)
Open Image Modal
Italian businessman Marcello De Finizio stands on the dome of the St Peter's basilica to protest against austerity measures on May 20, 2013 at The Vatican. (FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)