Rome Leaders Vote to Scrap 2024 Olympics Bid

The rejection leaves only Los Angeles, Paris and Budapest, Hungary, in the running for the 2024 Games

As far as its city leaders are concerned, Rome's bid for the 2024 Olympics is finished.

The city council voted in favor of scrapping the bid on Thursday, a week after Mayor Virginia Raggi rejected the candidacy, citing concerns over costs.

The rejection leaves only Los Angeles, Paris and Budapest, Hungary, in the running for the 2024 Games. The International Olympic Committee will decide on the host city in September 2017.

The decision comes on the same day California Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislation by which the state of California will provide up to $250 million in guarantees if the city of Los Angeles goes over budget in its bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympic Games and Paralympic Games. Mayor Eric Garcetti said the legislation "gives our LA Olympic and Paralympic bid even stronger financial protections -- and more importantly, the strong support of our state's leadership."

The legislation, authored by Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon, D- Los Angeles, will provide a financial backstop from the state in case of a budget shortfall. Bid leaders have estimated the Games could cost more than $6 billion but believe sponsorships, broadcasting rights and other revenue streams will more than cover the price tag, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Rome's anti-bid motion passed easily as expected, since Raggi's anti-establishment 5-Star Movement holds a majority on the city council. There were 30 votes in favor of withdrawing the bid, and 12 votes against the motion.

The 5-Star Movement holds 29 of the 48 council places, and all 29 voted in support of the mayor's rejection. There was also one supporting vote from an opposition party. Six council members were absent.

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However, Rome bid leaders and the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI) are hanging onto hope that the bid can somehow be revived -- perhaps if Raggi is ousted from office.

IOC President Thomas Bach will be in Rome next Tuesday for a sports and faith conference at the Vatican.

"We'll decide what to do after meeting Bach on Tuesday," CONI president Giovanni Malago said.

It's the second time in four years that a Rome Olympic bid has been rejected. In 2012, then-premier Mario Monti scrapped the city's bid for the 2020 Olympics because of financial concerns.

Under previous mayor Ignazio Marino, Rome's 2024 bid was approved by the city assembly last year with 38 votes in favor and only six against. Italian Premier Matteo Renzi was a strong supporter of the bid.

But Raggi, a 38-year-old lawyer who was elected in June as Rome's first female mayor, cited worries over costs and budget overruns as reasons for rejecting the bid. She called the candidacy "irresponsible" for a city that can barely collect its trash and keep up other basic public services.

The latest rejection is another signal that the IOC still has a lot of work to do to convince cities that hosting the games is a boon and not a burden. Earlier Thursday, a city government panel in Tokyo warned that the cost of the 2020 Olympics could exceed $30 billion -- more than four times the initial estimates.

Voters in Hamburg rejected the German city's 2024 bid in a referendum. Boston also dropped out last year amid a lack of public and political support and was replaced as the U.S. candidate by Los Angeles.

Four cities withdrew during the bidding for the 2022 Winter Games, leaving only two candidates in the field. Beijing, hardly known as a winter sports destination, defeated Almaty, Kazakhstan.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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