Italy Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni tapped as new prime minister

Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni was set on Sunday (Dec 11) to become Italy's new prime minister. PHOTO: AFP

ROME (AFP) - Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni was set on Sunday (Dec 11) to become Italy's new prime minister following reformist leader Matteo Renzi's resignation in the wake of a crushing referendum defeat.

President Sergio Mattarella, who had vowed on Saturday that he would move quickly to fill the void, summoned Mr Renzi's Democratic Party (PD) ally to the presidential palace.

The move came after opposition parties rebuffed overtures about a possible national unity government and Mr Mattarella rejected demands for an immediate election.

Mr Renzi, who had been in power for two years and ten months, resigned last week after voters overwhelmingly rejected a package of constitutional reforms on which he had staked his future.

Mr Gentiloni was to meet with Mattarella at 12.30pm (7.30pm Singapore time) on Sunday, the presidency said in a one-line statement.

Opposition parties were anticipating that the required vote of confidence in a new administration headed by Mr Gentiloni would take place on Wednesday.

The populist Five Star Movement, which has led calls for immediate elections, said it would boycott the vote because the new government would have no legitimacy.

Mr Mattarella said on Saturday the country urgently needed a "fully functioning government" to handle a string of pressing problems.

Chief among those is a looming crisis in the troubled banking sector and ongoing relief efforts after a series of deadly earthquakes between August and October.

Mr Gentiloni, 62, is a close ally of the former PM and will be seen by the opposition as a puppet premier keeping the seat warm for his colleague, who is planning a comeback at the next election.

That is due by February 2018 but could take place up to a year early.

Five Star, Italy's biggest opposition party, and the far-right Northern League are demanding a vote as soon as possible.

But Mr Mattarella, who enjoys extensive executive powers during government crises, said on Saturday an election could take place only after revision of current electoral laws.

Theoretically that could happen quickly but the process of harmonising the rules governing elections to the two houses of parliament, the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate, could also drag on for months.

As things stand, the lower house would be elected by a system under which the largest party is guaranteed a majority of seats while the Senate would be voted in under a proportional representation system.

Most observers agree that this is a recipe for perpetual conflict and government gridlock as the two chambers have equal powers.

The situation could be simplified at the end of January, when the constitutional court is due to rule on the legitimacy of the new winner-take-all system for the Chamber of Deputies.

Mr Gentiloni has served as foreign minister since October 2014, having been plucked by Mr Renzi from back bench obscurity to replace the current EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini.

His only previous government experience was two years as Mr Romano Prodi's communications minister from 2006-08.

He is a longstanding friend and ally of Mr Renzi and cynics will say that the silver-haired, grey-suited deputy's primary qualification for the job is that he poses no threat to the outgoing premier's comeback plans.

A registered journalist, Mr Gentiloni has been either a full-time activist or a politician since his days as a far-left political science student in the mid-1970s.

The toughest task he will have as premier is overseeing a rescue of troubled bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena (BMPS).

A state-funded salvage operation is seen as inevitable following the European Central Bank's refusal on Friday to allow more time for a private bailout.

Under EU rules, state funds can be injected into troubled banks only if private creditors accept losses. In the case of BMPS this could hit many small investors who hold the bank's junior bonds.

Imposing losses at smaller banks last year caused outrage in Italy and damaged Mr Renzi's standing.

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