Italy’s Tourism Minister resigns under pressure from Meloni
Milan– MILAN (AP) – Italy Legally embattled tourism minister resigns on Wednesday in protest against premier Georgia Meloni’s The referendum on judicial reforms failed.
Daniela Santanche’s departure is a sign that Italy’s three-and-a-half-year-old right-wing government has been weakened by Monday’s decision. Defeat at the ballot box is one major solution.
Meloni had called for Santanche’s resignation after two Justice Ministry officials stepped down in the wake of voters’ overwhelming rejection of judicial reforms in a vote that was widely considered a de facto confidence test on Meloni’s leadership. In a statement Tuesday, Maloney said he hoped Santanche would make a similar decision “in the same spirit of institutional sensitivity”.
Santanche, who was seen as a leading member of Meloni’s brother’s Italian The party has suffered many losses politically for a long time test and investigations. Which includes alleged misaccounting and alleged fraud. He has consistently denied any wrongdoing.
Despite her legal troubles, Santanche survived a vote of no confidence in 2023 and has long had Meloni’s support.
Santanchè announced her resignation in a statement to Meloni, in which she said she would “comply” with Meloni’s wishes and acknowledged the impromptu conversation on Tuesday after calls for the Prime Minister’s resignation. She said she would rather not be a “scapegoat” for the referendum defeat, underlining that the measure passed in her northern region of Lombardy and district.
Santanche wrote, “I will not conceal from you a certain amount of bitterness at how my ministerial journey ended, but in my life I have been accustomed to paying my debts – and often those of others as well.”
The judicial reforms were introduced by Meloni’s coalition as an important step towards streamlining Italy’s judicial system, which has been criticised as slow, bureaucratic, and vulnerable to political influence.
But critics argued that the proposed measures risked concentrating too much power in the executive branch. Opposition parties, civil society groups, and legal associations united to warn that the reform could weaken institutional checks and balances.
Defeat in referendum after a campaign Very closely linked to the leadership of the prime minister, questions have been raised about the stability and unity of Meloni’s ruling coalition.
