2nd ballot to elect Italy’s president fails, but strong candidatures start emerging

2nd ballot to elect Italy’s president fails, but strong candidatures start emerging
The League party leader Matteo Salvini casts a vote at the Chamber of Deputies to elect the country's new president in Rome, Italy, January 24, 2022. REUTERS/Yara Nardi/Pool

ROME, Jan 26 (NNN-Xinhua) — A second ballot to elect Italy’s new president took place in the parliament on Tuesday, delivering no results as it occurred in the first round the previous day.

Out of 976 votes totally cast, 527 were blank ballots.

Yet, talks within and between the two main coalitions — center-left and center-right — intensified alongside the proceedings, helping clear the way for the first strong candidatures.

The center-right bloc, led by the right-wing League party and former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia party, submitted three possible names: former judge Carlo Nordio, philosopher and former Senate Speaker Marcello Pera, and Letizia Moratti, former mayor of Milan.

The center-left coalition, led by Democratic Party and Five Star Movement, did not agree on them, but stated that it would refrain from submitting names in order to facilitate a broad agreement.

In addition, it proposed a direct meeting with the center-right’s leaders on Wednesday to outline a figure that both coalitions could perceive as truly non-partisan.

Italy’s constitution requires a majority of two-thirds in the first three rounds, followed by a simple majority from the fourth on.

Overall, some 1,008 “grand electors” take part in the choice of the head of state, namely all the members of parliament plus 58 representatives chosen by regional councils.

The person elected will replace President Sergio Mattarella whose seven-year term officially ends on Feb 3. — NNN-XINHUA

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