Italy's Salvini prepares "trump card" to break stalemate over president
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[January 25, 2022]
By Gavin Jones and Angelo Amante
ROME (Reuters) -Italy's parties resumed
talks on Tuesday to try to find a mutually acceptable head of state and
avoid the threat of political instability after a first round of voting
among lawmakers ended in stalemate.
Prime Minister Mario Draghi remains the most likely contender, but
worries that his promotion to president might shatter his coalition
government and trigger early national elections have complicated his
prospects.
As a result, the race for the prestigious, seven-year role is wide open,
with each political group cagily promoting candidates in
behind-the-scenes negotiations.
A second round of voting will begin at 1400 GMT after a majority of the
1,008 lawmakers and regional delegates cast blank ballots on Monday, a
way of playing for time while negotiations continue.
The president has a powerful role. He has the final say in naming the
prime minister and is often called on to resolve political crises in the
euro zone's third largest economy, where governments survive barely a
year on average.
A successful candidate needs a two-thirds majority in any of the first
three rounds of voting, with the threshold lowered to an absolute
majority in subsequent rounds. Parliament plans to hold one ballot a
day.
Matteo Salvini, head of the rightist League, has carved out a position
at the centre of the talks and has promised to present "several very
high profile candidates, men and women," to the other parties to try to
overcome the deadlock.
The League and its conservative allies Forza Italia and Brothers of
Italy plan to hold a news conference later on Tuesday to present these
names, a political source said.
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The League party leader Matteo Salvini attends a voting session at
the Chamber of Deputies to elect the country's new president in
Rome, Italy, January 24, 2022. REUTERS/Yara Nardi/Pool
Salvini met separately on Monday
with the leader of the centre-left Democratic Party, Enrico Letta,
and former prime minister Giuseppe Conte, who heads the 5-Star
Movement, the largest force in parliament.
"Salvini is the one who has the trump card and he has to decide when
to play it," former prime minister Matteo Renzi, who now heads a
small centrist party, said on Tuesday.
Ahead of another meeting with Letta scheduled on Tuesday, Salvini
denied media reports that he was negotiating behind the scenes with
Draghi to secure more cabinet posts for the League in a new
government in return for backing Draghi as president.
Letta and Conte will also meet at 1400 GMT to try to agree on a
joint position, Conte's spokesperson said.
Should Draghi fail to land the job of head of state, some
commentators are suggesting he may not want to continue as prime
minister if the multi-party coalition backing his government splits
over the presidential election.
Alternative names floated in the media include Senate speaker
Elisabetta Casellati, former lower house speaker Pier Ferdinando
Casini and former premier Giuliano Amato.
Some politicians have said they want outgoing President Sergio
Mattarella to accept a second mandate. He has so far ruled this out.
(writing by Gavin Jones;Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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