<p>Mario Draghi said he would resign as Italian prime minister on Thursday, after a party in his ruling coalition did not participate in a confidence vote.</p>.<p>"I will tender my resignation to the president of the republic this evening," Draghi told the cabinet, according to a statement released by his office.</p>.<p>"The national unity coalition that backed this government no longer exists," added Draghi, the former European Central Bank president who has been prime minister of a broad coalition since February 2021.</p>.<p>The confidence vote had become a focal point for tensions within Draghi's government as its parties prepare to fight each other in a national election due by early 2023.</p>.<p>The decision by the 5-Star party to boycott the confidence vote on Thursday had plunged Italy into political uncertainty and risked undermining efforts to secure billions of euros in European Union funds, tackle a damaging drought and reduce its reliance on Russian gas.</p>.<p>Draghi raised the stakes by saying he would not want to lead a government without 5-Star, who emerged as the largest party in the previous election in 2018 but have since suffered defections and a loss of public support.</p>.<p>It could lead to national elections as early as September or October after other coalition parties said there should be a vote if 5-Star no longer backed the government.</p>
<p>Mario Draghi said he would resign as Italian prime minister on Thursday, after a party in his ruling coalition did not participate in a confidence vote.</p>.<p>"I will tender my resignation to the president of the republic this evening," Draghi told the cabinet, according to a statement released by his office.</p>.<p>"The national unity coalition that backed this government no longer exists," added Draghi, the former European Central Bank president who has been prime minister of a broad coalition since February 2021.</p>.<p>The confidence vote had become a focal point for tensions within Draghi's government as its parties prepare to fight each other in a national election due by early 2023.</p>.<p>The decision by the 5-Star party to boycott the confidence vote on Thursday had plunged Italy into political uncertainty and risked undermining efforts to secure billions of euros in European Union funds, tackle a damaging drought and reduce its reliance on Russian gas.</p>.<p>Draghi raised the stakes by saying he would not want to lead a government without 5-Star, who emerged as the largest party in the previous election in 2018 but have since suffered defections and a loss of public support.</p>.<p>It could lead to national elections as early as September or October after other coalition parties said there should be a vote if 5-Star no longer backed the government.</p>