The two coalition partners, the Progressive Party and the Independence Party, agreed after talks late yesterday to hand the prime ministerial post to the agriculture minister Sigurdur Ingi Johannsson, 53, of the Progressives.
He replaces Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson, 41, who stepped down Tuesday amid massive public protests over a hidden offshore account revealed in the so-called Panama Papers leak of 11.5 million financial documents.
"We expect to have elections this autumn," Johannsson said, insisting that the coalition, in power since 2013, would continue to run the country's affairs despite thousands of protesters calling for the whole government's resignation.
"We will continue our work together. We are of course hoping this will help bring stability in the political system," he said.
President Olafur Ragnar Grimsson, who at 72 is due to retire in June after five terms and 20 years in office, is expected to approve Johannsson's appointment.
Iceland's next legislative elections were originally scheduled for April 2017.
Gunnlaugsson, who remains the head of the Progressive Party for the time being, was the first major political casualty to emerge from the leak of millions of documents detailing offshore accounts held by world leaders and celebrities.
Two other Iceland cabinet ministers have been singled out in the leak -- Finance Minister Bjarni Benediktsson and Interior Minister Olof Nordal -- and the coalition is keen to stall for time to avoid what would surely be a resounding protest vote if a snap election were held soon.
The coalition parties "have lost all their legitimacy, but I am sceptical they will leave of their own initiative. Time is on their side and it's crucial for them to stay in power," lamented Gyda Margret Petursdottir, a 42-year-old teacher who was one of hundreds who protested against the government outside parliament yesterday.
The Panama Papers, revealed by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), showed that Gunnlaugsson and his wife owned an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands and had placed millions of dollars of her inheritance there.
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