EU
#5-Star leader says Italy should quit euro unless rules change
The leader of the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement, Luigi Di Maio (pictured), said on Monday (18 December) that Italy should quit the eurozone unless it manages to change the bloc’s rules on public finances.
The maverick party threatens to hold a referendum on Italy’s euro membership unless it is allowed to boost public investment and raise the budget deficit above the current limit of 3% of gross domestic product.
Di Maio has recently softened the party’s anti-euro rhetoric, saying 5-Star is “pro-Europe” and calling the euro referendum a “last resort” to be used only if Italy is unable to win any concessions.
“If we should arrive at the referendum, which for me is a last resort because first I want to go to Europe and try to change a series of rules ... it’s clear that I would vote to leave, because it would mean Europe hasn’t listened to us on anything,” he said in a television interview on Monday.
“But today I see an opportunity for Europe to reform,” he told the private station La7.
Former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, the leader of the ruling Democratic Party (PD), said in a tweet that “this time Di Maio has been clear... he would vote to leave the euro. I say it would be madness for the Italian economy.”
The PD, which has split under Renzi’s leadership, lags 5-Star by some four percentage points in most opinion polls, but no party or coalition is seen winning an outright majority at the election, which is expected to result in a hung parliament.
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