Draghi takes helm in Italy, focused on pandemic recovery aid
Mario Draghi, the man credited with largely saving the euro currency, has formally taken the helm in Italy, focused on guiding the country through the pandemic and reviving its economy
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Your support makes all the difference.Mario Draghi, the man credited with largely saving the euro currency, on Saturday formally took the helm as Italy’s premier, after crafting a government that balances economic experts and other technocrats with career politicians from across the spectrum to guide the pandemic-devastated nation towards recovery.
Ending weeks of political crisis, Mr Draghi and his cabinet ministers took their oaths of office in a ceremony at the Quirinal presidential palace in front of President Sergio Mattarella. It was Mr Mattarella who tasked Mr Draghi, a former chief of the European Central Bank as well as of Italy’s central bank, with trying to form a government up to managing the Covid-19 health, economic and social crises.
Perhaps in a sign of Mr Draghi’s intent to get quickly to work in healing Italy, the swearing-in ceremony began three minutes early. In deference to coronavirus precautions, all participants in the ceremony were masked, and a palace aide provided each minister with a fresh pen to sign their oath.
After days of back and forth with political leaders, Mr Draghi on Friday evening announced a government deftly balancing economic experts and other technocrats with politicians from parties ranging from left to right. Given how the pandemic lockdowns have pummeled Italy’s already-stagnant economy, Mr Draghi chose for the crucial post of economy minister a non-political appointee, Daniele Franco, who has served both in Italian central bank posts and as the state’s accountant.
Eager to have a role in deciding how Italy will spend some €209bn (about $250bn), politicians from parties that have spent years demonising each other set aside differences, at least for now, and agreed to join Mr Draghi’s government.
That political backing will be crucial in parliament, where Mr Draghi next week must put his government to the test of mandatory confidence votes.
Political cooperation will also improve chances of speedy passage of spending packages and other legislative priorities so Mr Draghi can lead the nation into recovery.
The prospect of funnelling money into concrete projects to improve citizens’ lives is thanks to EU largesse that has been described as the biggest aid instrument since the Marshall Plan after the Second World War. It practically overnight transformed the euroscepticism of Matteo Salvini, the right-wing League leader, into a fervent pro-Europe proponent.
Mr Salvini did not get a ministry himself, but three of his party stalwarts did, including a key aide, Giancarlo Giorgetti, who will head the economic development ministry as Italy tries to bolster businesses knocked to the ground by the pandemic’s lockdown restrictions.
Also getting a share of the 23 ministry posts were four parties that formed Giuseppe Conte’s imploded coalition: the Democratic Party; a smaller left-wing party; a small centrist party led by ex-Premier Matteo Renzi, whose defection caused the Conte government’s collapse last month, and the biggest party inparliament, the populist Five Star Movement.
Born as an anti-establishment movement, the party was already splintering after being the lead party in back-to-back Conte governments since 2018 – one right-leaning and the other left-leaning. Its decision to join a Draghi government threatened to widen the fractures in the party, with roots in distrust of Brussels.
Back in government after a decade is Silvio Berlusconi’s centre-right Forza Italia party. The three-time premier and media mogul is a big backer of Mr Draghi and bills himself as a staunch champion of Europe.