Italian Premier Romano Prodi won a confidence vote in the Lower
House on Wednesday but he is expected to resign after defections in
his coalition made it clear he will not have a majority in the
Senate.
The vote saw 326 MPs voting in favor and 275 against the
confidence motion.
Prodi had originally planned to go to the Senate on Thursday to
seek its confidence but is now expected to tender his resignation
to President Giorgio Napolitano after meeting with his cabinet
early Thursday morning.
Napolitano would then confer with the former heads of state, the
speakers of the Senate and Lower House and political party leaders
before making any decision.
He has a series of options open to him including asking Prodi to
try and form a new government, giving an institutional figure like
the Senate Speaker Franco Marini an exploratory mandate to try to
form an interim government to adopt needed reforms before elections
or calling early elections and asking Prodi to stay on in a
caretaker capacity.
Officially most parties say they would prefer early elections
but there is a cross-party groundswell for adopting reforms first,
which would involve having an interim executive.
The government crisis began on Monday when the Udeur party of
ex-Justice Minister Clemente Mastella said it had withdrawn its
support from the government and would vote against it in any
confidence vote.
However, the Udeur did not take part in the Lower House vote
because their votes would not have been decisive and the confidence
motion was on the government's achievements over the past 20 months
to which the party had contributed.
The Udeur confirmed it would vote against Prodi in the
Senate.
Without the Udeur's votes in the Senate Prodi no longer had a
majority and the situation here became worse after other senators
who had backed his government said he no longer had their
support.
These included independent conservative Domenico Fisichella and
former ally Lamberto Dini, while leftist Franco Turigliatto
confirmed he would vote against Prodi.
Mastella decided to bring down the government citing differences
on a number of issues including electoral reform, a proposed
referendum on the current electoral law and relations with the new
Democratic Party, which was created through the fusion of the
Democratic Left and centrist Daisy parties.
(Xinhua News Agency January 24, 2008)