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| Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi (Xinhua
file Photo) | ROME, April 29
(Xinhua) -- Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi said on Saturday the he will
submit his resignation to President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi on Tuesday, Italian
News Agency ANSA reported.
Berlusconi, who has not yet called Prodi to concede
defeat in political election, said he would see Ciampi immediately after a
cabinet meeting convened on Tuesday.
Italian center-left candidates Franco Marini and
Fausto Bertinotti were elected Senate and Lower House Speakers on Saturday,
clearing the way for the formation of a center-left government led by former
European Commission president Romano Prodi.
Marini, a senator with the centrist Daisy party was
elected on the fourth ballot, garnering 165 votes against the 156 votes cast by
the center right for former premier Giulio Andreotti, a life senator.
But the center left's failure to get Marini elected
on Friday highlighted the fragility of Prodi's hold on the Upper House as well
as looming problems with coalition unity.
At least four senators initially broke rank, failing
to back Marini in the first day of voting in the 322-seat house.
Prodi, who won a wafer-thin victory over outgoing
premier Silvio Berlusconi in Italy's April 9 and 10 general election, had been
hoping for a first-round election for Marini.
Marini's election, at the end of two controversial
days of voting, was greeted by a long round of applause led by his 87-year-old
opponent.
"I'm very, very, very happy. We've settled down now,"
said a jubilant premier-elect Prodi, whose Union coalition holds a two-seat
majority in the Senate.
The Union needed the support of at least four of
Italy's seven life senators and one independent from abroad to get Marini
elected.
Earlier on Saturday, veteran Communist Fausto
Bertinotti was elected House Speaker with an absolute majority of 337 votes. The
Union has a 64-seat majority in the 630-seat chamber and Bertinotti 's election
had not been in doubt, despite numerous votes for Democratic Left Chairman
Massimo D'Alema.
Bertinotti - leader of the Communist Refoundation
Party - was also elected on the fourth ballot, when a two-third majority was no
longer required.
Both Marini and Bertinotti, former trade union
leaders, pledged impartiality, saying in their acceptance speeches they would
work to represent both coalitions' interests fairly.
But despite the upbeat climate in the center left,
most political commentators agreed that the difficulty surrounding Marini's
election showed that the incoming government will need to close ranks if it
hopes to survive in the Senate.
Italian newspaper "Corriere della Sera" (Evening's
post) editorialist Paolo Franchi warned that the mishap over Marini's election
was a sort of wake-up call for the coalition.
Under the Italian constitution, it is the president's
job to formally appoint a new government. Ciampi's term ends on May 18 and the
85-year-old president has made it clear that he would like his successor - who
will be chosen by the parliament in voting on May 11 and 12 - to name the new
premier. Enditem |