Final day of campaigning in Italy

Kamis, 10 April 2008

Silvio Berlusconi (left, AP photo) and Walter Veltroni (Getty photo) - both on 10/4/2008
Both candidates have promised to revitalise Italy's econo

Campaigning in Italy is in its final day ahead of this weekend's elections.

The vote comes three years early, after Romano Prodi stepped down as prime minister when his coalition government collapsed in January.

Billionaire businessman and former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, 71, wants a third term as prime minister.

His main rival is 52-year-old Walter Veltroni, the former mayor of Rome. Mr Berlusconi is ahead in opinion polls but 15% of voters are undecided.

'Little difference'

At his final election rally in Rome on Thursday, Mr Berlusconi appealed to his supporters to bring in more voters.

"Get out there and do missionary work," he told a crowd of 3,000 supporters.

Mr Berlusconi is the head of a business empire that spans media, advertising, insurance, food and construction and includes the successful football club AC Milan.

He is heading a new party - the People of Liberty.

Mr Veltroni is also leading a new party - the Democratic Party.

He compares himself to US Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama and has promised to boost pay and pensions to stimulate the Italian economy.

In truth, there is little to choose between the policies of the two candidates, says the BBC's Christian Fraser in Rome.

Both are promising to lower taxes and to cut public spending, our correspondent says.

The Italian debt is now 1,400bn euros (£1,100bn; $2,200bn) - more than the annual GDP.

The cost of paying the annual interest on that debt is around 1,200 euros per Italian - and all the signs point to the situation getting worse.





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