![Italian Lower House president Laura Boldrini, right, checks the t-shirt of PDL (People of Freedom party) member Alessandra Mussolini during the second day of the presidential election in Rome yesterday. Italy’s centre-left backed former Prime Minister Romano Prodi as candidate for President yesterday, setting up a battle with the centre-right alliance of Silvio Berlusconi and increasing the likelihood of a snap election within weeks. The t-shirt reads, “The devil wears Prodi”. Photo: Reuters Italian Lower House president Laura Boldrini, right, checks the t-shirt of PDL (People of Freedom party) member Alessandra Mussolini during the second day of the presidential election in Rome yesterday. Italy’s centre-left backed former Prime Minister Romano Prodi as candidate for President yesterday, setting up a battle with the centre-right alliance of Silvio Berlusconi and increasing the likelihood of a snap election within weeks. The t-shirt reads, “The devil wears Prodi”. Photo: Reuters]()
Former Prime Minister Romano Prodi failed to win election as Italy’s new President yesterday after his nomination by the centre-left bloc enraged Silvio Berlusconi and increased the chances of a snap election in the summer.
Berlusconi’s centre-right boycotted the vote for Prodi, one of the media magnate’s oldest political foes, and protested outside Parliament, accusing centre-left boss Pier Luigi Bersani of breaking a promise to put forward a candidate it could accept.
The vote was the fourth in a complex election process by 1,007 electors from both houses of Parliament and regional representatives. A fifth and sixth vote are expected today.
Centre-left officials said they would continue with Prodi as their candidate today but the failure of four votes so far underlined the raging political animosity and uncertainty more than 50 days after an inconclusive general election.
The presidential vote is closely intertwined with the search for a stable government capable of combating a severe economic recession in the euro zone’s third largest economy.
Prodi won only 395 votes, well short of the absolute majority of 504 he needed, indicating that centre-left rebels had again disobeyed...