The draft, obtained by Huffington Post Italia, is headed “Contract for the government of change” and presented for signature by Matteo Salvini of the nationalist League and the anti-establishment Five Star Movement’s Luigi Di Maio, the two party leaders locked in negotiations to form a coalition government after March’s election made them the two driving forces in Italian politics.
Neither has denied the authenticity of the document since it was published online on Tuesday night, though they issued a joint statementsaying it was “an old version that has already been substantially modified”.
The draft is dated May 14th, 2018 with a time stamp of 9.30 am, since when the party leaders have met twice.
While the parties’ statement specified that one of the most explosive proposals, an opt-out mechanism that would open the door to Italy leaving the European single currency, was no longer on the table, the document indicates that they were seriously considering it just two days earlier.
In further comments published on Facebook, they stated that they wished to return to an era before the Treaty of Maastricht, the 1992 contract that laid the foundations for the euro and bound member states to follow EU-wide financial rules.
Such rules, along with monetary policy, “must be reconsidered together with our European partners, in the spirit of returning to the pre-Maastricht setting when European states were motivated by genuine aims for peace, brotherhood, cooperation and solidarity,” the parties said.
Some of the proposals in their draft contract include:
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Asking the European Central Bank to forgive €250 billion of Italian debt.
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“Radically’ renegotiating the EU’s financial rules for member states as well as Italy’s contribution to the bloc’s budget. This section also outlines the opt-out mechanism for members to withdraw from the euro if there is “a clear desire” to do so, which is apparently no longer being considered.
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Immediately withdrawing sanctions on Russia, “which should be perceived not as a threat but as an economic and trade partner”.
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Revising the EU’s rules on migration, which the draft calls “unsustainable for Italy”. Proposals include changing the so-called Dublin rules that oblige migrants to apply for permission to stay in the country where they first arrive, and resettling incomers across all EU member states.
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Creating a “citizen’s income” of €780/month, similar to the M5S’s much hyped universal basic income, which would be funded by €17 billion of government spending – but the draft also says the EU should contribute to the scheme.
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Taking “bold and revolutionary measures” to ease Italians’ tax burden. The draft talks about establishing a flat tax, as promised by the League, though the document is not clear how it would work and suggests there would in fact be various rates and deductions.
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Reforming Italy’s pension system to allow workers to retire once they hit “level 100”: that is, when the sum total of their age and years contributing to social security add up to at least a hundred.
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Setting up a “reconciliation committee”: a sort of shadow cabinet that would be responsible for mediating disagreements within the government and deciding joint policy positions in future.
Some parts of the document – mostly the sections on immigration, according to the HuffPost – are highlighted in yellow, indicating that they’re the subject of disagreement.
Speaking before the draft was published, Salvini admitted that the League remained “far apart” from the M5S on certain points.
In a Facebook video, meanwhile, Di Maio had promised that an M5S-League government would be a “bomb” to Italy’s political establishment.
“I see in a certain establishment such a fear of change,” he said. “If we get there it will be a bomb – but a bomb in the positive sense. With courage we will succeed in returning citizens their rights and returning Italy to her rightful place on the European stage.”
Luigi Di Maio on Monday. Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP