Italy’s President Sergio Mattarella had set his eyes on retirement but was re-elected to the post after Italian lawmakers failed to agree on another candidate.
After accepting his new mandate, Mattarella — who has previously expressed a desire to retire from the largely ceremonial role, which carries a seven-year term in office — said he was obliged to put the good of the country first.
"The presidential election result should in principle offer the maximum degree of continuity with respect to the recent past, at least in the short run.
"The Italian medium-term political picture will likely be subject to higher uncertainty, in our view. The political ripples started by the presidential election saga will likely reach both the League and the 5SM, currently part of the national unity alliance. The centre-right emerges extremely divided from the vote, and Salvini's leadership of the coalition could be subject to scrutiny," Pizzoli noted.
He said in a note Saturday evening that"while at first sight this [vote] may suggest that the status quo has prevailed, the reality is that the overall political backdrop has become less supportive for the executive led by Draghi, which is facing a daunting task in the year or so left before the next general election."The whole political system, and especially the six parties part of the ruling coalition, have miserably failed the presidential election test, Piccoli believed.
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Italy presidential race delivers least bad optionItaly’s chaotic presidential race has ended at the starting line. After a week of high political drama, lawmakers and regional representatives on Saturday picked incumbent Italian President Sergio Mattarella, 80, for a second seven-year term. The choice averts an implosion of the reformist executive of Premier Mario Draghi, who had hoped to ascend to the presidency.
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Italy presidential race delivers least bad optionItaly’s chaotic presidential race has ended at the starting line. After a week of high political drama, lawmakers and regional representatives on Saturday picked incumbent Italian President Sergio Mattarella, 80, for a second seven-year term. The choice averts an implosion of the reformist executive of Premier Mario Draghi, who had hoped to ascend to the presidency.
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