Giovanni Malago, the frontrunner to become president of the FIGC (Italy's football federation), faces a challenge that could disqualify him before the election on Monday 22 June, even though he holds a majority bloc of delegates 1. The objection invokes "pantouflage", a cooling-off rule in Italian public-sector law that bars officials from moving straight into a related post they could have influenced. Malago is transitioning from CONI, Italy's national Olympic committee, which he led until 2025, and the question is whether that rule reaches a move from CONI to the football federation.
Italian precedent points both ways on whether the cooling-off period reaches a CONI-to-FIGC move, which leaves the legal ground genuinely unsettled and the dispute beyond what his numbers can absorb. Malago and his rival Giancarlo Abete filed their candidacies on Thursday 14 May , and the challenge surfaced afterwards as a threat aimed not at his support but at his standing to run at all. A majority is worth nothing if the candidate is ruled ineligible to receive it, and that is the route by which a procedural rule, rather than the assembly, could settle who leads Italian football out of a third straight World Cup absence.
