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Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has won a confidence vote in the upper house Senate allowing him to remain in office after a junior partner quit his coalition last week in the midst of
the raging COVID pandemic. Conte overcame a similar confidence motion in the lower house on Monday. Had he lost either vote, he would have had to resign. He won in the 321-seat Senate on
Tuesday by 156 to 140, with 16 abstentions, falling short of the 161 votes he needed for an absolute majority. An initial, informal tally had put the count at 153 to 140, but the numbers
were modified after a lengthy discussion in the chamber over whether a handful of late ballots were valid. The small Italia Viva party, which abandoned the cabinet in a row over Conte's
handling of the health crisis and economic recession, abstained, saving him from defeat. To help underpin his victory, Conte had to rely on the backing of three life senators and two
members of the opposition centre-right Forza Italia party. Although Conte's 17-month-old administration can remain in power, it will struggle to implement any meaningful policy program
in the deeply divided parliament, unless the prime minister can convince more lawmakers to join his coalition ranks. GET THE LATEST NEWS FROM THEWEST.COM.AU IN YOUR INBOX. Sign up for our
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