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Italy's referendum result marks 'phase of instability,' senior German MEP warns | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The result of Italy's referendum heralds a period of instability and is a setback for those who want to see reform in Europe, a senior MEP from Germany has said. | |
"Initially, a phase of instability now lies ahead of us — how will one of the biggest countries in the European Union now stabilise itself?" Manfred Weber, the head of the main conservative group in the European Parliament, told ZDF television. | |
"It is also a setback for those who want readiness for reform, those who want European countries to change," he added. "That is the only way we can deal with globalisation." | |
German's foreign minister also expressed concern about the result, which prompted Prime Minister Matteo Renzi to resign. | |
Speaking during a visit to Greece, Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that while the result of the Italian referendum on constitutional reform was "not the end of the world," it was also "not a positive development in the case of the general crisis in Europe." | |
The euro tanked to a 20-month low against the dollar overnight as shares across Europe opened lower after Mr Renzi conceded defeat in a referendum over his plan to reform the constitution and said he would resign. | |
At one stage the euro hit $1.0505, its lowest level against the US currency since March 2015. | |
However, the picture changed dramatically with the single currency climbing to $1.075 – its highest level for two weeks. | |
Despite concern about the result, other commentators cast doubt on whether the referendum will have a knock-on effect in Europe. | |
Luxembourg's foreign minister, Jean Asselborn, said the vote was an Italian domestic issue and he doesn't see it as a defeat for Europe. | |
He told German news agency dpa: "Italy voted on a reform. It would be wrong to extrapolate that now to the European level. It was a domestic political argument." | |
Germany's finance minister called for a calm response to the outcome said there's no basis to talk of it triggering a "euro crisis." | |
Wolfgang Schaeuble said Italy needs a government that is capable of acting and he hopes it will continue pursuing reforms despite the referendum result. | |
Mr Schaeuble added: "I think we should take note of this with a degree of calm. The Italians have decided; we have to respect that. They will make the best of it." | |
The minister added: "There is no reason to talk of a euro crisis and there is certainly no reason to conjure one up." | |
Similarly, the European Union's finance commissioner played down the impact of the referendum on the Euro and European unity. | |
Pierre Moscovici told reporters in Brussels that he has "full confidence in Italian authorities to manage this situation" after Italian voters rejected constitutional reforms and pro-EU Prime Minister Matteo Renzi announced his resignation. | |
With the euro trading lower on world markets, Mr Moscovici said, "I'm very confident in the capacity of the Eurozone to resist all kind of shocks." | |
French Finance Minister Michel Sapin insisted that the Italian referendum "is a question of internal politics. The referendum wasn't about Europe." | |
Both Mr Sapin and Mr Moscovici hailed the victory of a left-leaning, pro-EU Austrian president and defeat of his far right challenger. | |
Mr Moscovici added: "Populism is not inevitable. The extreme right is not irresistible." | |
Additional reporting by AP |