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Italy's Five Star party reels in Rome, losing national lustre

Published 06/09/2016, 18:16
Updated 06/09/2016, 18:20
© Reuters. Rome's newly elected mayor Virginia Raggi, of 5-Star Movement, gestures during a news conference in Rome
META
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By Crispian Balmer

ROME (Reuters) - Italy's anti-establishment 5-Star Movement (M5S) is in disarray following a disastrous start to its rule in Rome city hall, potentially denting its chances of winning power at a national level.

The party triumphed in municipal elections in the Italian capital in June, trouncing Prime Minister Matteo Renzi's ruling Democratic Party (PD) and presenting itself as a viable alternative to mainstream political forces across the country.

But the new Rome administration is mired in controversy, with the mayor, Virginia Raggi, admitting on Monday that she had known for weeks that one of her cabinet was under investigation for alleged wrongdoing, despite previous staunch denials.

M5S has built its popularity on denouncing the corruption that has dogged Italian politics for years and had overtaken Renzi in recent opinion polls.

It hopes that success in Rome will help it win parliamentary elections that are set for 2018, so news that Raggi and her allies had hushed up the embarrassing legal probe dismayed its supporters and delighted its foes in equal measure.

"We will remedy our mistakes with humility ... because we cannot expect from others things that we do not deliver ourselves," M5S Senator Nicola Morra wrote on his Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) page.

Italian newspapers denounced what they saw as rank hypocrisy.

"Chaos in Rome," said la Repubblica newspaper. "A failed revolution," said Rome daily Il Messaggero. "Armageddon for Five Star," said the Huffington Post's Italian edition.

Since her landslide victory, Raggi has struggled to make her mark. She took weeks to put together her team as party factions battled to impose their candidates for the top jobs and she drew criticism for offering big salaries to some of her staffers.

LEGAL ANGST

Last week five city officials, including the head of finance, quit in a chain reaction after Italy's anti-corruption agency said Raggi had not followed the correct bureaucratic procedures when she chose her chief of staff.

Still struggling to overcome the walkout, Raggi triggered fresh angst when she appeared before a parliamentary commission on Monday alongside Paola Muraro, the person she had appointed to sort out Rome's long-running rubbish collection problems.

During the hearing, Muraro revealed that she had found out in July that she had been placed under investigation for alleged malpractice in her previous job as a highly paid consultant at the city's AMA trash collection company.

Raggi acknowledged she also knew of the magistrates' probe.

Muraro, who is not a member of M5S but was handpicked for the job by Raggi, denies any wrongdoing. What outraged M5S supporters was that she had previously denied any knowledge of being the target of a legal probe.

"We have to admit our errors, ask forgiveness and dismiss those who have nothing to do with M5S, and will never have anything to do with it," M5S lawmaker Roberta Lombard wrote on her Facebook page, demanding the immediate removal of Muraro.

There was also discomfort in the ranks over Raggi's choice for a new head of finance -- retired magistrate Raffaele De Dominicis, who like Muraro is not a member of M5S.

© Reuters. Rome's newly elected mayor Virginia Raggi, of 5-Star Movement, gestures during a news conference in Rome

De Dominicis gained international prominence in 2014 when he opened an investigation into three ratings agencies for cutting Italy's sovereign debt ratings in 2011 and 2012. He said at the time that the cuts might have cost Italy more than 117 billion euros ($131 billion). The case was eventually shelved.

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