Prodi faces second confidence vote
Lower house of parliament expected to back the Italian prime minister.

Giorgio Napolitano, Italy’s president, asked Prodi to stay on and the prime minister rallied his allies behind him, paving the way for the confidence vote.
Prodi’s position remains shaky.
An opinion poll published by the La Repubblica newspaper in December showed Prodi’s approval rating had plunged 25 points from 63 per cent to 38 per cent since September.
Prodi could face further opposition from inside his coalition when members of parliament vote on draft law that will allow civil unions for gay couples.
The issue has caused friction between Catholics and radical left-wing members of Prodi’s coalition, as well as facing objections from the opposition and Vatican.
Prodi will also have to rely on support from his rival Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, to keep Italian troops in the Nato mission in Afghanistan.
On Thursday, Berlusconi pledged to support funding for the deployment which could be defeated without votes from outside the coalition.
Berlusconi said his centre-right backers would vote to continue funding for the 1,800 troops “because the country must be serious and have a clear, loyal policy toward its allies”.