Italy’s political impasse deepened by party enmity

Democratic Party divided over whether to hold coalition talks with Five-Star Movement

A mural in Rome depicting Five-Star Movement leader Luigi Di Maio kissing League leader Matteo Salvini in the context of their striking a deal. Photograph: Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images

Deep-rooted antipathy built up over years must be overcome if the anti-establishment Five-Star Movement and the centre-left Democratic Party (PD) are to strike a deal to form a government and end Italy’s post-election stalemate.

The third-largest economy in the euro zone has been in political limbo since a vote on March 4th produced a hung parliament. A centre-right alliance led by the anti-immigrant League won the most seats and Five Star emerged as the biggest single party. The PD came a distant third.

After an initial attempt to form a coalition between the centre-right and Five Star ended in failure, Italy president Sergio Mattarella last week asked Five Star and the PD to try.

If it were only about policies, the sides should be able to find some common ground, especially since Five Star’s 31-year-old leader Luigi Di Maio has recently shifted his party towards more moderate positions, close to those of the PD, in terms of fiscal policy and Europe.

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Both parties want to renegotiate Europe’s fiscal rules to allow Italy to cut taxes and increase investment, but say they would hold the budget deficit below the EU’s ceiling of 3 per cent of gross domestic product.

Italy’s Five Star has abandoned a previous pledge to hold a referendum on the country’s euro membership and its flagship policy, a universal income support for the poor, is essentially a more generous version of a policy already adopted this year by the PD.

Three policy priorities advanced this month by PD leader Maurizio Martina, centred on increasing welfare provision and fighting poverty, were broadly similar to initiatives advocated by Five Star.

However, the PD is split between factions that want to go into opposition, led by former leader and prime minister Matteo Renzi, and others that want to negotiate with its most bitter adversary during the last five years of PD government.

Mr Renzi’s successor, acting leader Martina, is in the second group. And he has called a meeting of the PD executive body on Thursday to decide whether to begin talks.

The Five-Star Movement’s leader Di Maio wants the two sides to come to terms on a limited number of policy goals, but Renzi loyalists do not even want to discuss policies.

“It’s a waste of time, it can only end in failure,” said PD president Matteo Orfini. “We are incompatible with Five Star in terms of political culture, programmes, history and what has happened in these past years.”

Mr Renzi’s supporters say that as a junior partner to Five Star the PD would get no credit for any government successes and would share the blame if things go wrong. Advocates of a deal say the greatest danger for the PD would be a quick return to the polls, where it risks losing even more support.

Deep wounds

The differences between the parties are about identity and personalities more than policies and they run very deep.

The Five-Star Movement was founded in 2009 by comedian Beppe Grillo as a protest against what he saw as Italy’s corrupt establishment comprising business tycoon Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia party on the right and the PD on the left.

The Five Star Movement has always maintained there is little difference between the two. It blames the PD for never passing a conflict of interest law to curb Berlusconi’s media empire. Moreover, it says that with the PD pro-business, politically-correct agenda it is an expression of vested interests and the status quo.

“The PD simply represents banks and multinationals,” said Grillo in 2016.

A poll published on Saturday by the SWG agency showed twice as many 5-Star voters identify themselves as centre-left than centre-right, yet the majority still preferred the idea of Five Star governing with the far-right League than with the PD.

The findings suggest that being pro- or anti-establishment is a more significant divide for Five-Star voters than the traditional left-right ideological labels.

Grillo (69) has taken a back seat in recent years, but his furious rants against the PD when he spearheaded the movement have left deep scars. And Five-Star politicians have on occasion been as verbally abusive as he was.

“Disgusting mafiosi”, yelled Paola Taverna, now deputy speaker of the Senate, at her PD counterparts in the upper house of parliament in 2015. Mr Renzi reserved most of his political attacks for Five Star rather than Forza Italia or the League. In return, he was dubbed a “half-wit” by Grillo and his followers.

“We can’t pretend there weren’t five years of government on one side and five years of insults on another,” said Simona Bonafe, a PD European parliamentarian who is close to Mr Renzi.

The insults have flown in the other direction too, with PD parliamentarians calling their Five-Star counterparts “fascists”.

The PD presented a new electoral law a few months before the vote which it later admitted was aimed at preventing a Five-Star victory.

There is no doubt that the main obstacle to a deal between the two parties is Mr Renzi.

He resigned as PD leader after the election when it won just 18 per cent of the vote, its worst ever result and some 14 points behind Five Star. But he had hand-picked most of its parliamentary candidates and retains a major influence on its decisions.

Some Five-Star politicians fear that even if the PD agrees at Thursday’s meeting to open policy talks, Mr Renzi and his followers will sink the negotiations later on or quickly bring down the government once it gets off the ground. – Reuters