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A key Meloni adviser suggests a new term for the CEOs of Italy’s major state-controlled companies

A key ally of the?Italian Prime Minister Giorgia?Meloni stated that Italy's state-controlled firms have performed "very well" over recent years, hinting at their chief executives being poised to receive new mandates when a new appointment round looms.

In the coming weeks, the CEOs of companies such as energy giants Enel, Eni, and defence group Leonardo will be nominated. This is traditionally seen as an opportunity for politicians to demonstrate their power over certain sectors of the economy.

Meloni’s coalition made their first round of appointments just a few?months after taking office in 2023. They reappointed Claudio Descalzi to the top of Eni, for a forth term, and replaced the heads of Enel and Leonardo.

Giovanbattista FAZZOLARI, an undersecretary of the cabinet who is often in charge of Meloni's key issues, stated late on Tuesday that "objectively, all state controlled companies have performed well."

Three sources said the government is ready to give a second term of three years to Enel's Flavio Cingolani and Leonardo's Roberto Cingolani and confirm Eni’s Descalzi to a fifth record mandate.

Sources said that while Meloni’s?coalition, which includes her Brothers of Italy Party, the League, and Forza Italia, seeks continuity in CEO roles, chairmen may be replaced to reshuffle the party representation on company boards.

According to LSEG, Eni Enel Leonardo has a combined market capitalisation of 227 billion dollars.

Sources said that it was not clear whether Giuseppina di Foggia - who Meloni nominated in 2023 to be the head of power grid operator Terna - would receive a new mandate.

Meloni, Italy's longest-serving government since World War Two will be able to reaffirm appointments made three years ago -- a situation that Fazzolari called "anomaly".

He told reporters at a press conference in Rome that "we will be faced with this strange situation where we have to decide who is confirmed and who is not".

(source: Reuters)