Italian prime minister faces the biggest test as public unity collapses under restrictions



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A year ago, the Italian prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, faced multiple internal crises and was in charge of an unstable government made up of two parties that had spent the previous five years as sworn and bitter enemies. Few in Rome believed it would last much longer than six months.

Twelve months later, and in the midst of a pandemic, to the surprise of many, Conte continues to lead that rickety coalition between the Five Star Movement and the Democratic Party. But having won accolades for his calm handling of the biggest economic and health crisis in Italy’s postwar history, he now faces the biggest challenge from his prime minister yet.

Conte, a quiet-spoken law professor who was once derided as little more than an interim leader, is on his way to becoming one of Italy’s 10 oldest prime ministers since the end of World War II. In six months he will have been in office longer than his predecessor, but one, Matteo Renzi, a result that most Italian experts would have believed impossible last year.

“From the beginning of the [coronavirus] In crisis, Conte’s communication strategy was to be very crude and honest with the country, and in doing so he embodied the authority that people wanted at the time, ”said Valentina Gentile, assistant professor of political philosophy at Luiss University in Rome.

On Sunday, hit by a new outbreak of coronavirus cases that Italy seemed to have previously curbed, and with public upheaval erupting in the streets, the prime minister delivered the kind of frank television speech that had had him loved by the Italian people for the first phase of the crisis.

Italian police officers during a protest by far-right activists against government restrictions in central Turin on Monday.  Photograph: Marco Bertorello / AFP via Getty Images

Italian police officers during a protest by far-right activists against government restrictions in central Turin on Monday. Photograph: Marco Bertorello / AFP via Getty Images

But this time, the reaction to the new restrictions that included closing restaurants and bars at 6 p.m. for a month was less sympathetic. Italy’s right-wing opposition seized on the new measures that heralded a return to a partial national blockade as evidence that Conte’s highly praised response to the first wave had in fact not worked.

Criticism of Salvini

When news emerged that Conte’s trusted spokesman and doctor, Rocco Casalino, had tested positive for coronavirus, Matteo Salvini, leader of the Anti-Migration League party, took to radio waves from Italy to condemn the measures, arguing that they would ruin even more an economy already battered.

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