The process of electing a new president of Italy begins on January 24 – Dragi’s transition to the highest office is open

The Italian parliament is convened on January 24 to elect the successor of Italian President Sergio Matarella, whose term ends on February 3, the Italian Parliament announced today.

The possibility of Prime Minister Mario Draghi taking over the top post remains.

Even though his responsibilities are mainly symbolic, the president of Italy has a key role to play in the event of a government crisis.

In this context, the outgoing President Sergio Matarella appealed to the former President of the European Central Bank last February to replace the Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, when the latter lost the parliamentary majority.

Mario Draghi, 74, has since led a broad governing coalition spanning the spectrum from the center-left to the nationalist right of Matteo Salvini, passing to the right of Silvio Berlusconi.

The Italian press is circulating a series of names of candidates for the succession of Sergio Matarella, the 80-year-old Sicilian who embodied unity in the storm.

Among the most prominent were former Christian Democrat Parliament Speaker Pierre Ferdinando Cassini, former Prime Ministers Paolo Gentiloni, European Commissioner for the Economy, and Giuliano Amato, the 82-year-old European pensioner.

The manner in which the President is elected by Parliament is complex. Deputies and senators, together with the representatives of the 20 Italian regions, that is, a total of about a thousand people gather to vote.

In the first three rounds of voting, a two-thirds majority is required, but from the fourth round, a simple majority is sufficient. Voting is by secret ballot, which has come as a surprise in the past, as many have not hesitated to violate party discipline.

Source: AMPE

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Source From: Capital

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