Italy’s anti-establishment 5-Star Movement pummeled a center-right coalition to govern Ostia, one of Rome’s largest neighborhoods, in a run-off vote that confirms the 5-Star’s strength months away from a national election.
Five-Star’s Giuliana Di Pillo took 60% of the vote, doubling her first-round result, against 40% for the center-right’s Monica Picca in a closely watched contest that comes just months before a national election, Reuters reported.
The result shows the legal troubles that have plagued the administration of Rome’s 5-Star mayor, Virginia Raggi, since her election in June of last year have not dampened the maverick party’s popularity in the capital.
“There is a Raggi effect and it’s positive,” Luigi Di Maio, the 5-Star prime minister candidate, wrote on Twitter. “In Rome we continue to win even against a coalition of five center-right forces.”
The 5-Star is Italy’s most-popular party ahead of a national vote due between March and May, while the ruling Democratic Party (PD) is a distant second, a poll showed last week.
But a center-right alliance joining Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia (Go Italy!), the anti-immigration Northern League and the far-right Brothers of Italy would pull in the most votes, though it would fall short of a parliamentary majority.