Giancarlo Abete, a former FIGC president, commands the Lega Nazionale Dilettanti (LND, the amateur-leagues federation) 34% bloc in the federal council, with Lega Pro (Serie C) adding to his column . Giovanni Malagò's Serie A bloc is 18%. The Italian Footballers' Association (AIC, 20%) and Italian Association of Football Coaches (AIAC, 10%) together control 30%, which is where the arithmetic leaves the decision.
Malagò met both mid-April and described the outcomes as 'very positive'. Abete is holding the same meetings this week, per ANSA. Candidate declarations close on 13 May; the Federal Council votes on 22 June. The AIC is the players' union, AIAC the coaches' association, and both have been courted by every reform-minded candidate in Italian football for a decade without typically drawing this much attention. They are drawing it now because Gravina has left the next president a ledger neither the clubs nor the amateur leagues can close by themselves.
Gravina's 8 April report put Italian professional clubs' collective debt at €5.5 billion with annual losses above €730 million, and ranked Serie A 49th of 50 leagues globally for under-21 minutes at 1.9% , . Malagò's three headline reforms, reinstatement of the Decreto Crescita tax break for foreign signings, repeal of the 2018 gambling-advertising ban, and a 1% levy on sports-betting turnover projected at €160 million a year, all require parliamentary votes. None can be enacted by federation resolution, which is why Serie A backed a CONI president with cross-bench access over a federation administrator without one.
