Rome: Italian Parliament began voting Monday for a new president – a process that can take several days and, with Prime Minister Mario Draghi leading to the work, the risk of not demanding the government.
The President was chosen for a period of seven years by an electoral college consisting of 1,009 people.
It consists of members of two parliamentary rooms – 630 MPS and 321 senators – plus 58 Delegates of Italy.
In the three first round of elections, the winner must secure at least two-thirds of the majority.
From the fourth round, the absolute majority is enough.
The ballot letter was thrown in secret and directly in the hall of the debate from the lower deputies, with only one day a day planned because of the coronavirus rules.
With Covid-19 today it is widespread in Italy, a drive-through voting station has been established in the car park to enable those infected to vote them from their vehicles.
The President is the Head of State and upholds the Italian Constitution, who became the Republic following a referendum after World War II.
The main role included naming the prime minister and, on the last advice, government ministers.
The president has the power to dissolve parliament, consult with the speaker, and ask him to reconsider the law.
Arbitring this way it became important at the time of the political crisis – it was the president of Sergio Mattarella who brought Draghi as a premier in February 2021.
The President also pointed to a third of the members of the Constitutional Court and had the right to forgive.
Anyone with 50 or more Italian citizenship is more qualified, and without a list of formal candidates, the results are very difficult to predict.
Draghi – career economist without political affiliation – seems to indicate its availability in December, calling itself “grandfather in institutional services”.
Former Prime Silvio Berlusconi, 85-year-old leader of Forza Italia’s right-wing party, campaigned for the post but was pulled out on Saturday.
Other potential candidates include Ex-Premiers Giuliano Amato, 83, and Paolo Gentiloni, the 67-year-old European Union Commissioner for the economy, and the former deputy room of Deputy Deputy Pier Ferdinando Casini, 66.
Many are hoping for the first Italian president of the woman.
Minister of Justice today and before, Marta Carabia, 58, and Paola Severino, 73, both ended in the work, like the Senate speaker Elisabetta Casellati, 66.
The secret properties of ballots have thrown some surprises in the 12th presidential election since 1948 – only One of them, Giorgio Napolitano (2006-2015), was chosen for the second term.
The role traditionally does not go to party leaders, but someone is seen as above the political field.
However, the favorites that enter the race often appear empty-handed.
In 2013, former Premier Romano Prodi was nominated by the Central Left Democratic Party but betrayed by several supporters and Napolitano Won.
The President’s formal residence is the Quirinale Palace, once returned to Popes and King of Italy.
Perched on the hill with the same name, the building area of 110,500-square meters is one of the biggest presidential palaces, only surpassed by Turkey.
Construction began in 1573 for the Pope’s summer residence.
It became their base as a secular ruler, with the Vatican left of their spiritual seat.
About 30 whales lived there, from Gregory XIII to Pius IX.
Under the French government, Napoleon ordered a renovation to make it a Roman residence, but never set foot there.
The Royal Italia lives there from 1870 to the Republic declaration in 1946, when it became the residence of the Head of State.