Tiny Italian party may delay election over technicality

ITALY: ITALY'S FORTHCOMING general election, scheduled for April 13th and 14th, may yet be postponed on a technicality

ITALY:ITALY'S FORTHCOMING general election, scheduled for April 13th and 14th, may yet be postponed on a technicality. A council of state ruling this week has re-admitted a tiny ex-Christian Democrat (DC) party initially excluded from the elections because its symbol too closely resembled that of another ex-DC party, the Unione di Centro (UDC).

Given that Italy's election legislation allows for 30 days of campaigning, the re-admitted DC party has now called for a postponement.

Speaking in Reggio Emilia yesterday, interior minister Giuliano Amato admitted the situation is somewhat confused, saying: "Right now, I cannot rule out the possibility that the elections will be postponed. We received formal communication this morning of a precautionary ruling, which could still be overturned, about the re-admission of a party symbol and thus the presentation of a party list. This is a situation not covered by election law."

Led by Giuseppe Pizza, DC is one of several centre-ground parties which have laid claim to the pre-1992 tradition of the Christian Democrat party, the party which dominated the first 45 years of postwar Italian politics.

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Allied to the centre left during the legislature led by Romano Prodi, whose government fell at the end of January, the DC has since switched its allegiance to the centre-right PDL coalition led by media tycoon Silvio Berlusconi. If re-admitted to the electoral contest, the DC is expected to win only a tiny handful of seats, if any at all.

In a row of truly opera buffo dimensions, the current DC party argues that it and it alone has the right to use the celebrated shield-and-cross symbol, used by the pre-1992 DC. However, a similar symbol is being used by the UDC, a party led by former lower house speaker Pier Ferdinando Casini and one expected to poll 5 to 7 per cent of the national vote. Formerly allied to Mr Berlusconi, the UDC is this time running alone.

Not surprisingly, the threat of a postponement prompted a negative reaction from most party leaders. Mr Berlusconi called any potential delay a "waste of time" for Italians and called on the DC to show a sense of responsibility and waive its legal right to extra campaign days.

Leading centre-left candidate Walter Veltroni, head of the Democratic Party, said: "I am totally against any postponement of the elections. This is a problem opened up by the right and the right should resolve it."