(ANSA) - Ischia, March 30 - League leader Matteo Salvini said
Friday that he is hopeful an agreement can be found to form a
government with a majority in parliament after this month's
inconclusive general election.
"We don't have the numbers now but we hope to have them
within a few days," Salvini, whose anti-migrant, Euroskeptic
party is the lead group in the centre-right coalition that came
first in the election, said as he left a hotel in Ischia where
he is spending the Easter holidays.
"Let's hope we can do the same with the government".
Salvini says the centre right should lead the next government
as the coalition is the biggest bloc in parliament with around
37% of the vote.
But the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement say it should be
the lead player as it is the biggest single party in the new
parliament with around 32% of the vote.
Salvini said that he will resume talks with 5-Star Movement
(M5S) leader Luigi Di Maio after the Easter break.
"We'll talk to Di Maio after Easter," Salvini said. "We are
assessing things with the 5 Stars. I can't say at the moment
whether these assessments will go far or will stop".
He added that he was aiming to be premier while stressing
that this was not a deal-breaking condition for the formation of
a new government: "I'm interested in working for Italy. I don't
have the arrogance to say me or no one".
Government-formation talks should start from the centre
right's programme, Salvini said.
"It's not as if you sit down to the table and say: I don't
like you, go away!", he said. "You start from projects, not from
names, from the premiers".
"You start from the things to be done, taxes, work, security,
the important thing are the things to be done.
"Seeing as how the centre right was the coalition that won
(the March 4 general election), I'm prepared to give life to a
government that start from the centre-right programme".
Salvini has said he will stand by his alliance with
centre-right Forza Italia (FI) leader Silvio Berlusconi, despite
misgivings from the M5S.
Government-formation talks, which start next week, are likely
to take months.
The talks should start from the centre right's programme,
Salvini said.
"Seeing as how the centre right was the coalition that won
(the March 4 general election), I'm prepared to give life to a
government that starts from the centre-right programme," he
said.
Salvini said that meant "the cancellation of the Fornero
(pension reform) law, cutting taxes, controlling borders, and
the expulsion of clandestine immigrants".
He also said he was prepared to discuss the M5S's flagship
policy proposal, a basic income, referring to "a citizenship
wage and loans to get into the world of work."
Salvini said "I'm ready to talk about everything, but we have
to start from the Italians' vote".
Don't have numbers for govt yet-Salvini (3)
New parliament started without rows says League leader