Italy’s Senate has voted to allow prosecutors to put far-right leader Matteo Salvini on trial over charges of holding migrants at sea.
Mr Salvini, who previously served as Italy’s interior minister, is accused of illegally keeping people on a boat off Sicily for days in August 2019.
Some 116 migrants remained aboard the Gregoretti for close to a week.
On Wednesday, a majority of senators voted for the trial of the anti-immigration League leader to go ahead.
Mr Salvini has repeatedly said he wants to go to court. He told the chamber he wanted “to tell the world” that his migration policies “saved tens of thousands of lives.”
“I am absolutely calm and proud of what I have done. And I’ll do it again as soon as I get back into government,” he said later.
Senators from his League party left the chamber rather than take part in Wednesday’s vote.
Under Italian law, ministers have parliamentary immunity for actions taken while they were in office. But a committee voted last month to strip Mr Salvini of his immunity – leaving the final decision in the hands of the Senate on Wednesday.
The upper house Senate voted 152-76 in favour of lifting the immunity.
After the tally was announced, Mr Salvini compared himself to US President Donald Trump, who was impeached in December and accused opponents of undermining his electoral success through the courts.
“I, like Trump? He has a few more billions and a few more years, but it’s a bad little habit of the left, going around in the world, to try to win by judicial means,” he wrote on Twitter.
If successfully prosecuted at trial, Mr Salvini could face up to 15 years in jail.
No fear for populist-in-chief Salvini
The response of most politicians when the hand of the judiciary comes knocking is to deny, evade, or flee. The response of Matteo Salvini: bring it on.
For a man who has built his political success on a hard anti-migrant line, the decision to try him for blocking migrants from Italy feeds the image he presents of himself as defender of the Italian nation. Italy’s populist-in-chief will revel in a move that depicts the man of the people as being targeted by the establishment.
And although eventual conviction could potentially end Matteo Salvini’s political career, he won’t be too worried for now. The wheels of justice move slowly in Italy: even if he were convicted, he’d have the right to two appeals, which could take years.
And he’ll take solace from his predecessor as Italy’s lead populist, Silvio Berlusconi, who was convicted for fraud, his sentence then commuted – and returned as an Italian MEP. A political comeback, Italian-style.
What is Mr Salvini accused of?
For years, some in Italy have complained that the country has taken in a large number of migrants fleeing across the Mediterranean, and has called for other EU nations to take their share.
Mr Salvini in particular took a hard stance on migrant boats while he was in office, implementing a closed ports policy.
Is there by chance something in the water there that is driving this stupidity?