Italy’s Conte Takes Role With Five Star for New Phase of Career

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Former Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, who led two Italian governments despite having no party affiliation, is positioning himself for a new political career by siding with the Five Star Movement, the biggest force in both of his coalitions.

Conte will draw up a plan to overhaul Five Star, which was born as an anti-establishment movement but has since gone more mainstream, the party said on its Facebook page. The ex-premier took on the job after a meeting with party leaders, including founder and ex-comic Beppe Grillo, in Rome on Sunday.

“People have for years written us off as dead, getting it wrong,” Luigi Di Maio, a former Five Star party chief who’s now foreign minister in the government of Mario Draghi, said on Facebook. “Giuseppe Conte will offer a decisive contribution to our cause.”

Conte, a 56-year-old lawyer and academic, was plucked from obscurity to serve as premier in 2018. Despite no party membership and no political experience, he became one of the country’s most popular politicians, and led a second government that served until this year after his first administration was ousted in 2019.

“I say to the friends of the Five Star Movement: I’m here and I will be here,” Conte said Feb. 4.

Conte’s next move could be to take over as Five Star party leader, or he could join a possible new five-person directorate to steer the movement.

Five Star, which won about 32% of the vote in Italy’s last national election in 2018, has been hemorrhaging support ever since as it struggles with fierce factional infighting. The party has been polling at around 15% in recent surveys.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.