Italy is open to Bundesbank head Jens Weidmann succeeding Mario Draghi as president of the European Central Bank, Finance Minister Giovanni Tria said in an interview with newspaper Welt.
“I do not want to go that far and say I support these ambitions. But I’m open to them,” Tria said. “I am unbiased.” The post becomes available in November, after Draghi’s term ends.
Weidmann, considered a monetary hawk, was once seen as the frontrunner to succeed Draghi as the euro region’s highest central bank official and become the first German in the job. However, he suffered a setback when compatriot German Manfred Weber was put forward by the European People’s Party as their candidate for European Commission president.
European Union governments are unlikely to allow Germany to fill two such senior posts, but Weidmann’s chances could improve if Weber’s bid fails after EU Parliament elections in May. The appointment will be part of complex government horse-trading, focusing on nationality and gender as well as expertise.
Meanwhile, the ECB’s watchdog for the region’s lenders may be left without its second-in-command this month as the incumbent concludes her time in office before the Governing Council can gather to propose a successor.
“Sabine Lautenschlaeger’s five-year term as vice-chair of the Supervisory Board will end as planned in February,” the ECB said in a statement by a spokesperson. “She will continue her eight-year term as member of the Executive Board.”
The move raises the prospect that weeks before a possible disorderly Brexit, the watchdog for the euro region’s biggest banks may be led solely by Andrea Enria, who has been in the job of chair of the Single Supervisory Mechanism for only a month.
Lautenschlaeger, 54, claimed on Friday that the ECB feels “well prepared as far as that’s possible.”
In January, ECB President Mario Draghi acknowledged a delay in agreeing the succession, saying “no I’m sorry, not yet,” when asked about the matter.
The Governing Council was previously scheduled to hold a non-monetary policy meeting next week, which is now no longer planned. That means it isn’t currently slated to gather formally before February 20 — nine days after Lautenschlaeger’s term concludes. Any meeting prior to that date might have to be ad hoc, perhaps by conference call.
Lautenschlaeger had repeatedly told colleagues she was unwilling to stay on in a temporary capacity, people with knowledge of the matter said in January.
Without the option of keeping her, Draghi should choose a vice chair from among the other members of his Executive Board, two of whom are due to quit later this year.
Only vice-president Luis de Guindos, Spain’s former finance minister and a one-time executive at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, would have a long-enough term remaining to serve the full five years required by the role.
Related Story