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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Angela Giuffrida in Pescara

Berlusconi joins Salvini on campaign trail as Italian right seeks gains

Silvio Berlusconi
Silvio Berlusconi at a press conference in Pescara on Thursday for the regional election campaign. Photograph: Luca Prizia/AFP/Getty Images

Silvio Berlusconi has returned to the campaign trail alongside Matteo Salvini as his rightwing coalition is revived ahead of elections in the central Italian region of Abruzzo on Sunday.

The former prime minister’s appearance at a press conference on Thursday was his first major campaign outing since March last year when the same alliance, made up of his Forza Italia and the two far-right parties, Salvini’s League and Brothers of Italy, took 38% of the vote in general elections.

The 82-year-old met Salvini, interior minister in the Italian government, and Georgia Meloni, who heads Brothers of Italy, in the regional capital of Pescara on Thursday to give a show of unity in a region that would be a strategic win for the group.

The alliance has put forward Marco Marsilio, a politician with Brothers of Italy, to compete in the regional vote, which is likely to lead to the ousting of the centre-left Democratic party. Recent polls put the centre-right in the lead, with about 39%, followed by the anti-establishment populists of the Five Star Movement (M5S) at 32.2% and a centre-left coalition at 28.2%.

Should Marsilio win, Berlusconi – who said he has always “been in love with Abruzzo” – has pledged to return to Pescara once a month for the first six months to assist him with a programme that includes investment in infrastructure and hospitals, and creating jobs to stop young people from leaving.

From left: Matteo Salvini, Giorgia Meloni, Gaetano Quagliariello and Silvio Berlusconi attend a joint press conference in Pescara.
From left: Matteo Salvini, Giorgia Meloni, Gaetano Quagliariello and Silvio Berlusconi attend a joint press conference in Pescara. Photograph: Luca Prizia/AFP/Getty Images

Berlusconi’s campaigning has included a return visit to L’Aquila, almost 10 years after over 300 people were killed and thousands left homeless by an earthquake. Berlusconi was prime minister at the time and kept a promise to build new homes for the displaced. “It was very emotional to go back there and to meet the people living in those homes,” he said.

If the coalition wins in Abruzzo, it would be a blow for M5S, which is governing nationally alongside the League. M5S won almost 40% of the vote in Abruzzo at the general election.

There had been speculation that Salvini, whose popularity has surged since becoming deputy prime minister and interior minister last June, might be tempted to ditch Forza Italia.

But Berlusconi, who has led Italy three times, said in an interview with Corriere della Sera on Wednesday that the League “has no vocation for suicide”.

“Relations with Salvini are always good, inspired by a mutual loyalty even when we disagree,” he added.

Berlusconi, who has made comebacks from a tax-fraud conviction, sex scandals and health woes, also announced in January that he would run as a candidate in the European elections. Forza Italia belongs to the European People’s party (EPP).

He said on Thursday that Europe must return to being a continent “that counts” and not one of “divided states”.

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