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Mario Draghi has resigned as Italy’s prime minister, triggering the dissolution of parliament and pushing the country into snap elections.

President Sergio Mattarella said on Thursday that the new elections would take place within 70 days, as required by the constitution. The caretaker government, led by Draghi, will set a date for the vote at a cabinet meeting later on Thursday.

Draghi quit as prime minister on Thursday morning after the three large parties in parliament boycotted a confidence vote in his leadership the previous evening following a rancorous parliamentary debate.

Addressing the country on Thursday, Mattarella noted that the early dissolution of parliament — whose term was due to expire at the end of June — was supposed to be a ‘last resort,” but that the political situation left him with no alternative.

He also expressed concern about Italy’s ability to meet “pivotal deadlines” for access to its next instalments of the €200bn in coronavirus recovery funds.

Draghi’s exit spells trouble for Italy and Europe at a time of acute economic challenges. The sell-off in Italian debt intensified following confirmation of his resignation, with the yield on Rome’s 10-year government bond jumping as much as 0.22 percentage points to 3.6 per cent.

That took the gap between Italian and German benchmark yields — a closely watched gauge of market stress — as wide as 2.33 percentage points, reflecting an expansion of around 0.30 percentage points in just two days.

After weeks of mounting tensions, Draghi on Wednesday accused some members of his cross-party national coalition of attempting to subvert his reform agenda and demanded that they recommit to it.

But two parties — Matteo Salvini’s League and Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia — together with the anti-establishment Five Star Movement led by Giuseppe Conte, boycotted the vote of confidence in his leadership.

Foreign minister Luigi Di Maio, who led a walkout from Five Star last month in protest at Conte’s sniping at Draghi’s policies, called the government’s collapse “a black page for Italy”.

“We played with the future of Italians,” Di Maio wrote on Twitter after Wednesday’s developments. “The effects of this tragic choice will remain in history.”

Italy’s inflation rate hit 8 per cent in June, its highest level since 1986, according to the statistical agency. Faltering on a tight schedule of promised reforms would also jeopardise Rome’s ability to receive the €200bn in EU recovery programme.

Draghi had agreed an ambitious schedule of reforms with the EU with a plan to enhance competition and cut red tape to make Italy more attractive to investment, and to guarantee the sustainability of its heavy public debt, now at about 150 per cent of gross domestic product.

Many of these reforms were expected to be completed by elections scheduled for next spring but the process is likely to be put on hold.

A FTSE gauge of Italian stocks had earlier slid more than 2 per cent, taking its losses over the past two days to almost 4 per cent. The country’s largest banks, which are significant holders of Italian debt, led the declines, with Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit each down about 5 per cent.

The market tumult came as the European Central Bank announced the first rise in eurozone interest rates since 2011, as well as new policies to limit the divergence between the borrowing costs of the bloc’s strongest and weakest economies, including Italy.

“What a day to make crucial monetary policy decisions,” said Frederik Ducrozet, global macro strategist at Swiss wealth manager Pictet Wealth Management.

Draghi’s exit will also be a setback to the western alliance against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The Italian leader has taken an uncompromising stand towards Moscow and was a key architect of the tough sanctions against Russia president Vladimir Putin.

Berlusconi, a former prime minister, had close personal ties with Putin, with whom he once went on holiday, while Salvini has been an admirer of the Russian leader.

Additional reporting by Harriet Clarfelt in London

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