Centrist Azione (Action) party leader
Carlo Calenda on Sunday pulled out of an election pact with the
centre-left Democratic Party (PD) boosting the opposing
right/centre right alliance's already high chances of coming to
power in Italy on September 25.
The former industry minister said he had been forced to withdraw
by the PD's teaming up with two leftwing parties, Italian Left
(SI) and Green Europe (EV), and Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio's
new Civic Commitment (IC) party.
"I found myself side by side with parties who voted 54
no-confidence votes in (outgoing premier Mario) Draghi," said
Calenda who is campaigning on continuing the agenda of the
former European central banker.
PD leader and former premier Enrico Letta accused Calenda of
"consigning the country to the right", where a Brothers of
Italy-led coalition is favoured to win next month's vote.
There is speculation that Calenda may now team up with another
centrist leader, former PD leader and ex-premier Matteo Renzi,
whose Italia Viva (IV) party had been set to run alone having
been shunned by the centre left.
Calenda's erstwhile allies More Europe are expected to keep to
the pact they signed with the PD a week ago.
More Europe bigwig and former foreign minister and European
commissioner Emma Bonino said "it doesn't make sense to change
your mind every three days".
More Europe are polling at around 2%, as is Azione, while the
SI-EV alliance is at around 3.5% and IC 3%.
The rightwing Brothers of Italy (FdI), led by premiership
candidate Giorgia Meloni who could become Italy's first woman
prime minister, is leading the race on over 23% with the PD
second on just under 23%.
FdI's rightwing ally the League has about 14% and the third
ally, Silvio Berlusconi's centre-right Forza Italia (FI) party,
about 8%.
Together, the rightwing coaltion has over 45%, more than enough
to see it claiming power.
Letta had been seeking to widen the centre left's appeal with an
alliance with former premier Giuseppe Conte's populist 5-Star
Movement (M5S), but that bid was scuppered when Conte became the
prime mover in a shift to defenestrate Draghi that gathered
momentum when the centre right and right came aboard.
Meloni on Monday reaffirmed her right to be her coalition's
premiership candidate, on the basis of the rule that the party
that gets the most votes on September 25 will see its leader
vying to get a role that is in the ultimate gift of President
Sergio Mattarella.
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