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Friday, December 26, 2025

Italy’s Prime Minister Letta Resigns Under Pressure; Party backs Renzi; Rise of the Oligarchy; Trial by Fire Coming Up

Courtesy of Mish.

Under severe pressure following weeks of messy name-calling, Italy’s prime minister Enrico Letta resigned. 39-year-old Florence mayor, Matteo Renzi, will stand in.

President Napolitano refuses to call for elections, so questions of legitimacy are sure to arise, and indeed have already.

The Financial Times reports Letta to stand down as Italy’s PM after party backs Renzi.

Italy’s prime minister Enrico Letta has been ousted after a brutal power struggle with party leader Matteo Renzi.

The centre-left Democratic party on Thursday overwhelmingly backed the 39-year-old mayor of Florence to replace Mr Letta as head of the left-right coalition government.
 
Mr Renzi, the 39-year-old mayor of Florence, is now on his way to becoming Italy’s youngest ever prime minister. He won the vote in a meeting of the party’s leadership committee by 136 in favour and 16 against. Two abstained.

Within minutes of the vote, the prime minister issued a statement effectively saying the game was over. Mr Letta said he would submit his resignation to Giorgio Napolitano, the Italian head of state, on Friday following the outcome of the leadership meeting.

Reflecting what some Democrats feel about the spectacle of the party devouring one of its own, Pippo Civati, a leftwinger on the leadership committee, compared the treatment of Mr Letta to the way a giraffe at Copenhagen’s zoo was euthanised last Sunday to prevent inbreeding.

Mr Civati might have added that the remains of the young giraffe were fed to the lions.

Mr Renzi, twice elected mayor of Florence and overwhelming winner of primaries for the party leadership in December, has never stood in national elections and faced a barrage of ridicule in major newspapers on Thursday.

Corriere della Sera’s popular cartoonist, Giannelli, lampooned the young ambitious reformist, reminding him of all his previous declarations – that he would never play the backroom deals that characterised many of Italy’s postwar governments, that he only wanted to come to power through elections, that he would not oppose Mr Letta and that he would never form a coalition with the centre-right.

That Mr Renzi might reverse course on all those fronts, risking immediately his public credibility, is feeding a sense of alarm in his camp….

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