ROME: Former Italian prime minister Mario Monti has warned that he may withdraw support for the coalition government of Enrico Letta if it cannot resolve disagreements between its main partners and push ahead with economic reforms to tackle a deep recession.
Monti’s Civic Choice alliance has too few seats in parliament to bring down the government, but his warning is a sign of growing concern at the slow pace of reform because of disagreements between the centre-left and centre-right parties which are the main planks of Letta’s coalition.
“Without a change in direction, we do not think that in the long-term we will be able to support a government impacted by growing ambiguities,” Monti wrote on his Facebook page.
Monti, who introduced pension and labour reform, spending cuts and tax hikes while head of a year-long technocrat government that came to power at the height of a financial crisis in November 2011, said Letta had started well since taking over in April.
But he said the government needed to overcome differences between and within the coalition parties so it could push on with radical reforms to boost growth and make Italy more competitive. Italy is deep in its longest recession since Second World War, with unemployment at record levels.
He urged Letta to draw up a coalition contract to ensure those reforms were carried out regardless of uncertainties within the two major parties.
Letta’s centre-left Democratic Party (PD) will elect a new leader in the autumn and the centre-right People of Freedom (PDL) party faces uncertainty due to the mounting legal woes of its leader Silvio Berlusconi. He was convicted last week on charges of paying for sex with a minor and abuse of power.
Reuters