Italy's Di Maio fires ultimatum in govt talks

Di Maio's Five Star Movement (M5S) seeks to broker a German-style "government contract" with Matteo Salvini's nationalist League party without Silvio Berlusconi, whom the M5S deems politically corrupt.

Anti-establishment 5-Star Movement leader Luigi Di Maio speaks to the media during the second day of consultations with the Italian President Sergio Mattarella at the Quirinal Palace in Rome, Italy, on April 5, 2018.
Reuters

Anti-establishment 5-Star Movement leader Luigi Di Maio speaks to the media during the second day of consultations with the Italian President Sergio Mattarella at the Quirinal Palace in Rome, Italy, on April 5, 2018.

Italy's anti-establishment chief Luigi Di Maio on Wednesday gave far-right leader Matteo Salvini until the "end of the week" to dump coalition ally Silvio Berlusconi and strike a deal in the latest round of Italian government talks.

Earlier Italian President Sergio Mattarella tasked senate speaker Maria Elisabetta Alberti Casellati with brokering an agreement by Friday between Di Maio's Five Star Movement (M5S) and Salvini's nationalist League party, which leads a right-wing coalition that contains Berlusconi's Forza Italia.

The pair are vying to lead the country out of weeks of political deadlock that has emerged from the March 4 general election.

The third round of consultations centres on Di Maio's refusal to deal with Berlusconi, who the M5S sees as a symbol of political corruption, and the 81-year-old media magnate's distaste for the "anti-democratic" M5S.

And after meeting the senate speaker on Wednesday afternoon Di Maio dug his heels in, calling Salvini's right-wing grouping "an electoral gimmick" and demanding that he come to the negotiating table alone.

"I expect a definitive response [from Salvini] by the end of the week," Di Maio told reporters.

"The country can't wait any longer."

Ultimatum given

Di Maio wants to create a German-style "government contract" with the League.

"The only forces capable of signing this contract and forming a government in these consultations are the M5S and the League," he added.

Alberti Casellati is an ally of former prime minister Berlusconi, and her election as the first-ever female senate speaker was part of a pact that aimed to smooth the path to an alliance between the M5S and the League.

They have been battling over who should lead the government since the M5S became Italy's largest-single party with just under 33 percent of the vote and the right picked up 37 percent.

Despite Di Maio's pressure, Salvini has refused to break up the grouping that won the most number of seats in the parliament and gave him a chance of becoming prime minister.

"I don't see respect for the people's vote. The one that came second dictating the rules to the one that came first," Salvini said.

Di Maio's ultimatum was designed to put pressure on Salvini, who is eyeing elections on April 29, in the northeastern region of Friuli Venezia Giulia, where a League candidate backed by Forza Italia is the favourite to win.

It also opened the door to potential future talks with centre-left Democratic Party (PD), who are not involved in this round of consultations after their coalition came third and subsequently refused to deal with either the right or M5S.

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