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Italy lawmakers fail to elect new president in first round

Even as the names on the hand-written ballots from the 1,009 electors were still being read aloud, it was clear that, as expected, no candidate had come remotely close to the two-thirds majority needed to elect a new head of state in the first three rounds. Electors will have another crack at it on Friday.

The biggest “vote-getter” was “blank ballot,” a sign that broad consensus for a figure who is supposed to be above the political fray was still elusive despite days of political maneuvering by Renzi to secure backing for his choice. Starting Saturday, the threshold for victory drops to a simple majority, enhancing the probability that sufficient agreement could be found among Italy’s myriad of political parties and alliances. The Italian president’s post is largely ceremonial, but his powers including dissolving Parliament in case of unresolvable gridlock.

The president also seeks to build consensus for a new premier in case of government collapse — not a rare event in Italy. The office is supposed to be above the political fray.

First to cast ballots were senators-for-life, including Giorgio Napolitano, who reluctantly accepted an unprecedented second term as the nation’s president two years ago after squabbling lawmakers couldn’t agree on a new one.
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