Post
Topic
Board Politics & Society
Re: Italy’s Prime Minister resigns snap elections to follow.
by
Babaiaga
on 01/09/2019, 01:44:05 UTC
This situation has already been 'fixed' in the eyes of those that don't like Matteo Salvini, Conte has been placed back into the role as PM of Italy and he has a new coalition backing him.

Not surprising in the least, though it did seem like that for a couple days that the new coalition was going to be unable to form.

Matteo Salvini's party is still the most popular in italy, and could see a resurgence when the next election comes -- giving them more power in parliament.

The situation in Italy had more drama than GOT season 8, lots of twists and turn and finally Conte is back hopefully he’ll do good work and retain his chair when elections come. There’s no doubt about Salvini’s party being popular, but I feel their reputation took a hit when they decided to withdraw their support for Conte. Only time will tell who is the winner of this feud, because currently we’re back to square one and will have to wait for next elections.

Eh I don't know about that.

I think that for the Salvini party this is a slap in the face to all of the people that worked to elect them. Leaving them with little to no power, and locked out due to a new coalition is something that isn't going to go very well in the eyes of the voters (at least in my eyes)

I guess we'll be able to tell at some point, I'll probably comment back then.
Salvini was at the governance with the 18% of preferences, the 5stars with the 37%. Now the five stars are at the governance with Democrats (18%). It is a number question, and for this Salvini is a big penis

Check out the polls on who the most popular party is -- https://www.politico.eu/italy/

That's showing that this could get very interesting, very fast. Since the last election the 5 star party has crashed in the polls, like CRASHED.
the same polls that i have seen before the april election of 2 years ago (20% m5s) and then 37%.