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No-Confidence Vote Ushers In Italy's Youngest-Ever Premier

Florence Mayor Matteo Renzi of Italy's Democratic Party is next in line to be the country's prime minister. Enrico Letta is stepping down after a vote of no confidence.
Alessandra Tarantino
/
AP
Florence Mayor Matteo Renzi of Italy's Democratic Party is next in line to be the country's prime minister. Enrico Letta is stepping down after a vote of no confidence.

Italy's Prime Minister Enrico Letta will step down after his own party launched a no-confidence vote against him, paving the way for the young and popular mayor of Florence to assume the post.

The Wall Street Journal reports:

"Mr. Letta's resignation brings an end to a government that is barely 10 months old and has teetered on the brink of collapse virtually from its birth. It will clear the way for [President Giorgio] Napolitano to ask Matteo Renzi to try to form a new government."

Renzi, 39, is described by the Journal as "a rising star of Italian politics [who] pulled his support for the government earlier Thursday after months of criticizing the premier for failing to act aggressively enough to combat Italy's protracted economic downturn."

The New York Times says:

"Renzi, the mayor of Florence who recently won a nationwide primary to become leader of the Democratic Party, has a reputation for boldness and has long been considered Italy's most promising young politician. He has spoken repeatedly about the need for sweeping political and economic changes. But few analysts foresaw that he would lead a revolt against his party's sitting prime minister."

In July, Letta managed to persuade the European Union to allow the country to depart from its strict austerity and begin stimulating growth and promoting jobs. But that has, so far, done little to alleviate the country's deepest and most protracted post-war recession, which has been exacerbated by high public debt, low consumer spending and uncompetitive exports.

As recently as Wednesday after a face-to-face meeting with Renzi, Letta, 47, had vowed to hang on, saying "you don't step down because of gossip, because of power plays and behind the scene activities."

The Financial Times opines:

"Italy's latest political upheaval would have sent shockwaves through the eurozone during the sovereign debt crisis of 2011. But in a sign that confidence is returning to the bloc, markets remained relatively sanguine on Thursday about the prospect of the single-currency's third-largest economy coming under the command of a relative political novice, with [2 trillion euros] of public debt and youth unemployment at record highs."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Scott Neuman is a reporter and editor, working mainly on breaking news for NPR's digital and radio platforms.