|
Special Report: Italy's general
electionกก
ROME, April 12 (Xinhua) -- Italian centre-left
coalition leader Romano Prodi has rejected a centre-right "grand coalition"
after his razon-thin parliamentary election victory, according to Italian news
agency ANSA.
"There's no need for a grand coalition," he said on
Wednesday, adding that "our victory was clear and recognized by all."
Prodi's coalition has a majority of 64 seats in the
lower house and two in the Senate.
His rival, Italian current Premier Silvio Berlusconi
has yet to concede defeat and he proposed on Tuesday a cross-party alliance of
the kind forged in Germany.
Prodi has insisted his broad coalition including
Communists and centrist Catholics is cohesive enough to last a five-year
legislature, as Berlusconi's did.
He said he was "speaking for the whole coalition" in
rejecting the centre-right overture.
Prodi, who served as premier from 1996 to 1998 before
a term as European Commission chief, appeared eager to start implementing the
platform he spent months thrashing out with his allies.
He said the priority was to jump start the stagnant
Italian economy with a five-point cut in payroll costs.
In other points, Prodi said Italy would pull out of
Iraq according to a timetable agreed with the Iraqi government and replace its
troops with a civilian reconstruction team.
Prodi's victory is expected to be ratified before the
end of the week, after disputed ballots are checked. Enditem |