TIRANA – A well-known talian senator Gianluigi Paragone will launch a new party later this week called “Italexit”, after first meeting the UK’s Nigel Farage, who helped steer Britain out of the European Union.
“We can no longer be blackmailed by countries that offend the great prestige of Italy,” said Paragone as quoted by EUobserver on Wednesday.
Paragone, a former TV journalist, who once belonged to the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement, met Brexit architect Nigel Farage in London on Monday before announcing the formal birth of his “Italexit” party later this week.
Polls in May showed most Italians do not trust the EU.
“The others want to change Europe, we want to quit,” Paragone said after the EU deal was struck.
It remains to be seen if Paragone’s movement can tap into the well of anti-EU sentiment which has grown among Italians in recent years but lacks an obvious political home.”
Paragone left the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement soon after it formed a government with the pro-European Democratic Party (PD) last year, moderating its critical attitude towards Brussels institutions.
Even Matteo Salvini’s right-wing League, until recently the main rallying point for eurosceptics, has softened its line against Brussels and the euro in a bid to gain respectability.
The timing of Paragone’s move looks questionable, coming as the EU reached a deal on Tuesday to launch an economic Recovery Fund worth 750 billion euros, which the bloc’s supporters say shows its renewed cohesion and vision.
Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said earlier on Tuesday that 28% of the fund would be for Italy in a mix of grants and loans that could “change the face of the country”.
The European issue has dominated Italian politics in recent years, with eurosceptics blaming the EU for the country’s chronic economic stagnation and its difficulties in handling migrant arrivals from Africa.
A Eurobarometer survey in 1998 showed 69% of Italians supported EU membership, while in 2002, after the introduction of euro notes and coins, Italy was the second most pro-euro nation after Luxembourg, with 79% expressing a positive opinion, said the Guardian on Wednesday.
A survey by pollster SWG at the end of May showed just 39% of Italians said they trusted the EU./argumentum.al