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Italy’s left insists far-right isn’t destined to win vote


ROME (AP) — Italy’s Democratic Party leader used a rally Tuesday evening to try to galvanize center-left voters, especially young people, trying to confound opinion polls that indicate a right-wing campaign alliance is headed to triumph in this month’s election of a new Parliament.

“No destiny is already written,” former Premier Enrico Letta told a few hundred people in a Rome square. ”We will make a democratic and progressive Italy win” in the Sept. 25 balloting.

His chief rival, far-right leader Giorgia Meloni, is intent on becoming the first woman to hold Italy’s premiership.

As Letta tried to instill confidence among the Democrats’ base, an opinion poll published Tuesday said Meloni’s nationalist, fast-growing Brothers of Italy party and Letta’s Democrats are running neck and neck at just over 20% support for each.

But Meloni has a crucial advantage over Letta that could prove her springboard into the premier’s office. She is in a broad campaign alliance with two well-established right-wing and conservative figures — anti-migrant League leader Matteo Salvini and Silvio Berlusconi, who has led three governments with his Forza Italia party.

The survey of eligible voters by the Ixe’ Institute polling firm said the 5-Stars had just under 14% support and Salvini’s League nearly 11%. The opinion poll incidated Meloni’s alliance could clinch an absolute majority in both chambers of Parliament.



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