LUXEMBOURG (Reuters) – Euro zone finance ministers decided on Thursday to delay a vote to replace the outgoing head of the bloc’s bailout fund as countries remained divided over the successor of retiring Klaus Regling.
Three candidates were still running for the job as the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) held its annual meeting on Thursday in Luxembourg.
They are Luxembourg’s former finance minister Pierre Gramegna, former finance minister of Portugal Joao Leao and top Commission official Marco Buti from Italy.
An official familiar with the discussions said that the vote had to be postponed because the qualified majority needed for a candidate to be elected was missing.
The official added that the stalemate was largely caused by Buti’s reluctance to quit the race, despite being the candidate who had received the fewest votes among the three in a non-decisive preliminary vote.
A second official said Buti was still a candidate that could prevail over the others.
The ESM is a European lender of last resort to governments, created at the height of the sovereign debt crisis in 2012, which issues bonds guaranteed by all 19 countries in the euro zone. It has a lending capacity of 500 billion euros.
The ESM can also extend precautionary credit lines to sovereigns before they get cut off from markets, directly recapitalise banks or lend to governments for that purpose and buy sovereign debt on the primary and secondary markets.
During the pandemic, the ESM also offered to lend to euro zone governments for healthcare, cure and prevention related costs, but no country used that option.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; additional reporting by Jan Strupczewski; Editing by Alex Richardson)