When in 2013 the anti-establishment party urged a vote on the single currency, "Germany had a monolithic government, the French-German axis was very strong, Britain was still fully involved," Five Star (M5S) leader Luigi Di Maio said today.
"It was very difficult to negotiate. Today, everything has changed," he told TGCOM24 television.
"Germany has been struggling for 90 days to put a government together, Spain has a minority government, France's traditional parties are weaker than ever.
The movement has been steadily distancing itself from the idea of a referendum as it gears up for its first run at national leadership at the March 4 general elections.
Founded in 2009 and the leading single party in opinion polls, M5S supports a hotchpotch of policies from across the political spectrum.
Popular with younger voters in particular, it is accused by critics of being too immature to take over at the helm of the eurozone's third largest economy.
Di Maio, 31, said yesterday a vote on the euro "would be an 'extrema ratio'," a Latin term for the last possible solution.
"(Northern League head Matteo) Salvini has changed his mind on leaving the euro, he has understood that it would be untenable for our economy," Berlusconi told Radio Capital.
But Claudio Borghi, the anti-immigrant party's head economist, said that "the moment the League gets into government it will make all the necessary preparations for monetary sovereignty".
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