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 This article is part of the series: Politics and government of Italy Image File history File links Italy-Emblem. ...
The Politics of Italy takes place in a framework of a parliamentary representative democratic republic, whereby the Prime Minister of Italy is the head of government, and of a pluriform multi-party system. ...
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| | | Other countries · Atlas Politics Portal view • talk • edit | The Parliament of Italy (Italian: Parlamento Italiano) is the national parliament of Italy. It is a bicameral legislature with 945 elected members (parlamentari). The Chamber of Deputies, with 630 members (deputati) is the lower house. The Senate of the Republic is the upper house and has 315 members (senatori). The Constitutional Court of Italy (Italian: Corte costituzionale della Repubblica Italiana) is the supreme court of Italy. ...
The President of the Italian Republic is the head of State of Italy, and represents national unity. ...
Giorgio Napolitano (born June 29, 1925), is an Italian politician and former lifetime senator, the eleventh and current President of the Italian Republic. ...
In Italy, the President of the Council of Ministers (Italian: Presidente del Consiglio dei Ministri) is the countrys prime minister or head of government, and occupies the fourth-most important state office. ...
(born 9 August 1939) is an Italian politician. ...
The Prodi II Cabinet has been in charge from May 17, 2006. ...
Palazzo Madama house of the Senate of the Republic. ...
Back side of Palazzo Montecitorio designed by architect Ernesto Basile. ...
The Court of Cassation (Corte di Cassazione in Italian) is the main court of last resort in Italy. ...
Political parties in Italy are organized into two dominant political coalitions. ...
Casa delle Libertà (CDL; literally translated from Italian to English as House of the Liberties but most often translated as House of Freedoms), is a major Italian center-right political alliance led by national media tycoon Silvio Berlusconi. ...
The Union (Italian: LUnione) is an Italian centre-left political party coalition. ...
Elections in Italy gives information on election and election results in Italy. ...
A general election for the renewal of the two Chambers of the Parliament of Italy was held on April 9 and April 10, 2006. ...
A national general election was held in Italy on May 13, 2001 to elect members of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate of the Republic. ...
The Constitution of Italy provides for legally binding referenda. ...
The Regions of Italy were granted a degree of regional autonomy in the 1948 constitution, which states that the constitutions role is: to recognize, protect and promote local autonomy, to ensure that services at the State level are as decentralized as possible, and to adapt the principles and laws...
In Italy, a province (in Italian: provincia) is an administrative division of intermediate level between municipality (comune) and region (regione). ...
Municipalities of Italy In Italy, the comune, (plural comuni) is the basic administrative unit of both provinces and regions, and may be properly approximated in casual speech by the English word township or municipality. ...
The European Union or EU is a supranational and international organization of 27 member states. ...
This article describes the foreign relations of Italy. ...
This is a list of major political scandals in Italy: Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconis many corruption charges Tax evasion bribing members of the judicary immunity legislation Media manipulation fro political propaganda P2 scandal, 1980s Tangentopoli (diffuse corruption cases in national politics), early 1990s Categories: Incomplete lists | Politics of Italy...
Information on politics by country is available for every country, including both de jure and de facto independent states, inhabited dependent territories, as well as areas of special sovereignty. ...
In government, bicameralism is the practice of having two legislative or parliamentary chambers. ...
A legislature is a type of representative deliberative assembly with the power to adopt laws. ...
Back side of Palazzo Montecitorio designed by architect Ernesto Basile. ...
A lower house is one of two chambers of a bicameral legislature, the other chamber being the upper house. ...
Palazzo Madama house of the Senate of the Republic. ...
An upper house is one of two chambers of a bicameral legislature, the other chamber being the lower house. ...
Since 2005, a Proportional System electoral law is being used in both houses. A majority prize is given to the coalition obtaining a plurality: at national level for the House of Deputies, at regional level for the Senate. Year 2005 (MMV) was a common year starting on Saturday (link displays full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Proportional representation (sometimes referred to as full representation, or PR), is a category of electoral formula aiming at a close match between the percentage of votes that groups of candidates (grouped by a certain measure) obtain in elections and the percentage of seats they receive (usually in legislative assemblies). ...
A plurality, relative majority or simple majority is the largest share of something, which may or may not be considered a majority, i. ...
Function of the Parliament The Parliament is the representative body of the citizens in the republican Institutions, and act accordingly. By the Republican Constitution of 1948, the two Houses of the Italian Parliament possess the same rights and powers: this particular form of parliamentary democracy (the so-called perfect bicameralism) has been coded in the current form after the dismissal of the fascist dictatorship of the 1920s and 1930s and after World War II. The two Houses are independent from each other and never meet jointly except under circumstances specified by the Constitution. The House of Deputies has 630 members, while the Senate has 315 elected members and a small number of life senators: former Presidents of the Republic and up to five members appointed by the President for having contributed to the Country high achievement in the social or scientific field. As of 15 May 2006 there are seven life senators (of whom three are former presidents). To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article may require cleanup. ...
Fascism is an authoritarian political ideology (generally tied to a mass movement) that considers individual and other societal interests subordinate to the needs of the state, and seeks to forge a type of national unity, usually based on, but not limited to, ethnic, cultural, or racial attributes. ...
The 1920s is a decade that is sometimes referred to as the Jazz Age or the Roaring Twenties, usually applied to America. ...
Face The 1930s (years from 1930â1939) were described as an abrupt shift to more radical and conservative lifestyles, as countries were struggling to find a solution to the Great Depression, also known in Europe as the World Depression. ...
Combatants Allied powers: China France Great Britain Soviet Union United States and others Axis powers: Germany Italy Japan and others Commanders Chiang Kai-shek Charles de Gaulle Winston Churchill Joseph Stalin Franklin Roosevelt Adolf Hitler Benito Mussolini Hideki TÅjÅ Casualties Military dead: 17,000,000 Civilian dead: 33,000...
A senator for life is a member of the Italian Senate appointed by the President of the Italian Republic for outstanding merits in the social, scientific, artistic or literary field. Former Presidents of the Republic are ex officio life senators. ...
is the 135th day of the year (136th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 2006 (MMVI) was a common year starting on Sunday (link displays full 2006 calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The main prerogative of the Parliament is the exercise of legislative power, that is the power to enact laws. For a text to become law, it must receive the vote of both Houses independently in the same form. A bill is discussed in one of the Houses, amended, and approved or rejected: if approved, it is passed to the other House, which can amend it and approve or reject it. If approved without amendments, the text is promulgated by the President of the Republic and becomes law. If approved with amendments, it is passed back to the originating House, which can approve the bill as amended, in which case the law is promulgated, or reject it. A legislature is a governmental deliberative body with the power to adopt laws. ...
Look up Promulgation in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
The President of the Italian Republic is the head of State of Italy, and represents national unity. ...
The Parliament votes support to the Government, which is appointed by the President of the Republic and usually led by the leader of the coalition winning the elections. The Government must receive a support vote by both Houses before being officially in power, and the Parliament can request a new vote of support at any moment if a quota of any House so requests. Should a Government fail to obtain a vote, it must resign; if it does, either a new Government is formed or the President of the Republic can dissolve the Houses and new elections are held. The President of the Italian Republic is the head of State of Italy, and represents national unity. ...
The Parliament in joint session of both Houses elects the President of the Republic, five (one third) members of the Corte Costituzionale and one third of the Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura. It can vote to decide an accusation of high treason or attack to the Constitution against the President of the Republic (situation has never occurred). The President of the Italian Republic is the head of State of Italy, and represents national unity. ...
Overseas constituency The Italian Parliament is one of the few legislatures in the world to reserve seats for citizens residing abroad. There are twelve such seats in the Chamber of Deputies and six in the Senate. An expatriate (in abbreviated form expat) is someone temporarily or permanently in a country and culture other than that of their upbringing and/or legal residence. ...
The Overseas Constituency consists of four electoral zones, each of which elect at least one Deputy and one Senator: The remaining seats are distributed between the same overseas electoral zones in proportion to the number of Italian citizens resident in each. World map showing the location of Europe. ...
South America South America is a continent crossed by the equator, with most of its area in the Southern Hemisphere. ...
North America North America is a continent[1] in the Earths northern hemisphere and (chiefly) western hemisphere. ...
For other uses, see Central America (disambiguation). ...
A world map showing the continent of Africa Africa is the worlds second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. ...
World map showing the location of Asia. ...
World map exhibiting a common interpretation of Oceania; other interpretations may vary. ...
Electoral system The electoral system was changed in the run-up to the 2006 General Election from an Additional Member electoral system to a proportional one. The opposition coalition at the time, L'Unione, pledged to reinstate the previous system if they won the election. In the event, L'Unione did win the election by a very narrow margin. A general election for the renewal of the two Chambers of the Parliament of Italy was held on April 9 and April 10, 2006. ...
The Additional Member System (AMS) is a voting system in which some representatives are elected from geographic constituencies and others are elected under proportional representation from party lists. ...
LUnione (The Union in English) is a Italian left-wing coalition of parties. ...
New electoral system (2005-) The new electoral system, approved on December 14 2005, is based on proportional representation with a series of thresholds to encourage parties to form coalitions. is the 348th day of the year (349th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Proportional representation (sometimes referred to as full representation, or PR), is a category of electoral formula aiming at a close match between the percentage of votes that groups of candidates (grouped by a certain measure) obtain in elections and the percentage of seats they receive (usually in legislative assemblies). ...
Both for the lower and higher house of the Parliament, Italy is divided in a certain number of constituencies, in which seats will be distributed according to the share of votes received by a party. Available seats are assigned to these constituencies proportionally to their population. In all cases, the lists of party candidates is given beforehand, and citizens cannot state a preference for any given candidate: if a list wins 10 seats, its first ten candidates will be elected. The law officially recognizes coalitions of parties: to be part of a coalition, a party must sign its official program and indicate a candidate to prime-ministership.
Chamber of Deputies Italy is divided in 26 constituencies: Lombardy has three constituencies, whereas Piedmont, Veneto, Latium, Campania, and Sicily have two and all other regions one. These constituencies elect 617 MPs. Another one is elected in Aosta Valley and 12 are reserved to the constituency of Italians living abroad. For the village of the same name in Ontario, Canada, see Lombardy, Ontario. ...
For other uses, see Piedmont (disambiguation). ...
Veneto or Venetia, is one of the 20 regions of Italy. ...
Latium (Lazio in Italian) is a region of central Italy, bordered by Tuscany, Umbria, Abruzzo, Marche, Molise, Campania and the Tyrrhenian Sea. ...
For other uses, see Campania (disambiguation). ...
Sicily (Sicilia in Italian and Sicilian) is an autonomous region of Italy and the largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, with an area of 25,708 km² (9,926 sq. ...
The Regions of Italy were granted a degree of regional autonomy in the 1948 constitution, which states that the constitutions role is: to recognize, protect and promote local autonomy, to ensure that services at the State level are as decentralized as possible, and to adapt the principles and laws...
The Aosta Valley (Italian: Valle dAosta, French: Vallée dAoste, Arpitan: Val dOuta) is a mountainous Region in north-western Italy. ...
To obtain seats, some thresholds must be surpassed on national basis: - Minimum 10% for a coalition. If this requirement is not met, the 4% limit for single parties apply.
- Minimum 4% for any party not in a coalition.
- Minimum 2% for any party in a coalition. However, the first party in a coalition that rates below 2% is also assigned seats.
Also, parties representing regional linguistic minorities obtain seats if they receive at least 20% ballots in their constituency. The coalition or party that obtains a plurality, but is assigned less than 340 seats, is assigned additional seats to reach this number, corresponding roughly to a 54% majority. Seats are allocated proportionally to received votes in each constituency, among the parties that passed the thresholds on a national basis. A plurality, relative majority or simple majority is the largest share of something, which may or may not be considered a majority, i. ...
Senate of the Republic For the Senate, the constituencies correspond to the 20 regions of Italy, with 6 senators allocated for Italians living abroad. The electoral system is very similar to the one for the lower house, but is in many ways transferred to regional basis. The thresholds are also different, and applied on regional basis: Image File history File links Download high resolution version (1056x1330, 114 KB) Summary The political situation after the regional elections of April 2005 in Italy. ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (1056x1330, 114 KB) Summary The political situation after the regional elections of April 2005 in Italy. ...
The Union (Italian: LUnione) is an Italian centre-left political party coalition. ...
Casa delle Libertà (CDL; literally translated from Italian to English as House of the Liberties but most often translated as House of Freedoms), is a major Italian center-right political alliance led by national media tycoon Silvio Berlusconi. ...
The Regions of Italy were granted a degree of regional autonomy in the 1948 constitution, which states that the constitutions role is: to recognize, protect and promote local autonomy, to ensure that services at the State level are as decentralized as possible, and to adapt the principles and laws...
- Minimum 20% for a coalition.
- Minimum 8% for any party not in a coalition.
- Minimum 3% for any party in a coalition (there is no exception for the first party in a coalition below this threshold, as in the lower house).
The coalition that wins a plurality in a region is automatically given 55% of the region's seats, if it has not reached that percentage already. It is possible for a coalition to win in a region and lose in another: there is ostensibly no mechanism to guarantee a nation-wide majority in the Senate.
Criticism The new electoral law came under wide criticism from the centre-left opposition for a series of reasons: - Instability
- The system was considered to be less stable than the previous additional member system, and to give more room for political intrigue. The region-based system in the higher house is not guaranteed to produce a clear majority, and may pave the way for crises.
- Large Party Bias
- It was alleged that the system is thoroughly studied to advantage prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's House of Freedoms: in particular, there are many small parties below or around the 2% threshold in the opposition coalition L'Unione (such as the Italian Democratic Socialists, the Federation of the Greens, Italy of Values, Popular Alliance-UDEUR, the Party of Italian Communists, and the European Republican Movement), whereas there are much fewer in Berlusconi's alliance. However, these parties did form electoral alliances to avoid losing votes. One such alliance is the Rose in the Fist.
- "Partitocracy"
- It has been alleged that Italian parties have retained too much power in the First Republic, screening the choices citizens had in elections; this electoral law would reinstate fixed electoral lists, where voters can only express a preference for a list but not for a specific candidate. This can be used by parties to all but guarantee re-election to unpopular but powerful figures, who would be weaker in a first past the post electoral system.
- Adaptation to gallups
- In Italian elections the left-wing tends to fare better in direct confrontation than in proportional voting, a sign there are voters who trust left-wing candidates but right-wing political parties, for reasons that can be debated. It is alleged that the centre-right majority in the Parliament undertook this reform to boost their chances in the upcoming elections of 2006 (they indeed lost by a very small margin).
- No agreement with the opposition
- The law was passed by the majority against the opinion of the opposition. Whereas all recognize their full right to do so, many feel that the "rules of the game" should be agreed upon by everybody, and not imposed by one side.
- Expensiveness
- The Parliament of Italy is considered one of the worlds most expensive governments.
See also this series of articles by La Repubblica and this description by the Forza Italia Web site. The Additional Member System (AMS) is a voting system in which some representatives are elected from geographic constituencies and others are elected under proportional representation from party lists. ...
(born September 29, 1936) is an Italian politician, entrepreneur, and media proprietor. ...
Casa delle Libertà (CDL; literally translated from Italian to English as House of the Liberties but most often translated as House of Freedoms), is a major Italian center-right political alliance led by national media tycoon Silvio Berlusconi. ...
LUnione (The Union in English) is a Italian left-wing coalition of parties. ...
The Italian Democratic Socialists (Socialisti Democratici Italiani, SDI) is a small social-democratic party of moderate-left policies, heir of the old Italian Socialist Party, born in 1998 by the convergence of the Italian Socialists and the Italian Democratic Socialist Party. ...
The Federation of the Greens (Federazione dei Verdi, or just Verdi) is the Italian Green Party. ...
Italy of Values (Italia dei Valori, IdV) is a populist and anti-corruption political movement in Italy, headed by former magistrate and Mani Pulite campaigner Antonio Di Pietro. ...
The Popular Alliance-UDEUR (Italian: Alleanza Popolare-UDEUR) is a small centrist political party in Italy, led by Clemente Mastella. ...
The Party of Italian Communists (Italian: Partito dei Comunisti Italiani, also translated into English as Italian Communists Party) is a political party in Italy. ...
The European Republican Movement (Italian: Movimento Repubblicani Europei) of Italy is a small center left liberal party, part of the Olive Tree coalition and the ALDE group in the European Parliament. ...
The Rose in the Fist is an Italian political federation of parties founded in 2005. ...
The Politics of Italy takes place in a framework of a parliamentary representative democratic republic, whereby the Prime Minister of Italy is the head of government, and of a pluriform multi-party system. ...
The First Past the Post electoral system, is a voting system for single-member districts. ...
An opinion poll is a survey of opinion from a particular sample. ...
La Repubblica (meaning: The Republic) is an Italian daily newspaper. ...
Forza Italia (Forward Italy) is an Italian party. ...
The previous electoral system (August 1993-2005) Between 1991 and 1993, resulting from two referendums and legislation, Italian electoral law was altered substantially. Electoral law in Italy is determined by Parliament, not the constitution. This, taken with the concurrent collapse of the Italian party system, marks the transition between the First and Second Italian Republics.
Two referendums The nearly pure proportional representation system of the First Republic had resulted not only in party fragmentation and therefore governmental instability, but also insulation of the parties from the electorate and civil society. This was known in Italian as partitocrazia, in contrast to democracy, and resulted in corruption and pork-barrel politics. The Italian constitution allows, with substantial hurdles, abrogative referendums, enabling citizens to delete laws or parts of laws past by Parliament (with exceptions). Proportional representation (sometimes referred to as full representation, or PR), is a category of electoral formula aiming at a close match between the percentage of votes that groups of candidates (grouped by a certain measure) obtain in elections and the percentage of seats they receive (usually in legislative assemblies). ...
A reform movement known as COREL (Committee to Promote Referendums on Elections), led by maverick DC-member Mario Segni, proposed three referendums, one of which was allowed by the Constitutional Court (at that time packed with members of the PSI and hostile to the movement). The June 1991 referendum therefore asked voters if they wanted to reduce the number of preferences, from three or four to one, in the Chamber of Deputies, to reduce the abuse of the open-list system by party elites and ensure accurate delegation of parliamentary seats to candidates popular with voters. With 62.5% of the Italian electorate voting, the referendum passed with 95% of those voting in favor. This was seen as a vote against the partitocrazia, which had campaigned against the referendum. Mario Segni (Sassari, May 16, 1939) is an Italian politician. ...
Open list describes any variant of party-list proportional representation where voters have at least some influence on the (by the political party itself supplied) order in which party candidates are elected. ...
Emboldened by their victory in 1991, and encouraged by the unfolding Mani pulite scandals and the substantial loss of votes for the traditional parties in the 1992 general elections, the reformers pushed forward with another referendum, abrogating the proportional representation system of the Italian Senate, implicitly supporting a plurality system that would theoretically force parties to coalesce around two ideological poles, thereby providing governmental stability. This referendum was held in April, 1993, and passed with the support of 80% of those voting. This caused the Amato government to collapse three days later. Municipal elections were held in June, 1993, further illustrating the lack of legitimacy the sitting parliament held. The President of Italy, Francesco Cossiga, thereupon appointed a technocratic government, led by former head of the Bank of Italy, Carlo Ciampi, with the sole task of writing a new electoral law. Mani pulite (Italian for clean hands) was a nationwide Italian police investigation into political corruption held in the 1990s, following the scandal of Banco Ambrosiano in 1982, which implicated mafia, Vatican Bank and P2. ...
Francesco Cossiga (born July 26, 1928) is an Italian politician and former President of the Italian Republic. ...
Technocracy (techno for technology and cracy for power) is an organizational system in which decision makers and political leaders are selected on the basis of technological knowledge âoften because of some conflict or competition where technological escalation is a constant feature. ...
Pres. ...
As it was under no constitutional obligation to enact a purely majoritarian system (nor were they under obligation to promulgate a new electoral law for the Chamber of Deputies), and cognizant of its declining popular support, the sitting parliament enacted a new electoral law in August, 1993 that provided for single-member districts while reflecting their own interests. Despite this, many of them would be voted out of office in the national election in March, 1994.
The electoral law The national elections used an Additional Member System, which in Italy was a mixed system, with 75% of seats allocated using a First Past the Post electoral system and 25% using a proportional method, with one round of voting. The Senate and the Chamber of Deputies differed in the way they allocated the proportional seats, although both used the D'Hondt method of allocating seats. The Additional Member System (AMS) is a voting system in which some representatives are elected from geographic constituencies and others are elected under proportional representation from party lists. ...
The First Past the Post electoral system, is a voting system for single-member districts. ...
The DHondt method (equivalent to Jeffersons method) is a highest averages method for allocating seats in party-list proportional representation. ...
The Senate includes 315 elected members, of whom: Palazzo Madama house of the Senate of the Republic. ...
- 232 are directly elected in single-member districts.
- 83 are elected by regional proportional representation
- six represent Italians residing overseas
- a small, variable number of senators-for-life include former presidents of the Republic and several other persons appointed for life by a president of the Republic (no more than 5), according to special constitutional provisions (scientists, writers, artists, social workers, politicians, tycoons).
The Senate was elected on a single ballot. All those votes not contributing to a winning candidate were thrown into a regional pool (of which there were 40), and within that district were then used to allocate the seats proportionally. There was no electoral threshold for the Senate. A senator for life is a member of the Italian Senate appointed by the President of the Italian Republic for outstanding merits in the social, scientific, artistic or literary field. Former Presidents of the Republic are ex officio life senators. ...
In party-list proportional representation systems, an election threshold is a clause that stipulates that a party must receive a minimum percentage of votes, either nationally or within a particular district, to get any seats in the parliament. ...
The Italian Chamber of Deputies has 630 members, of whom Back side of Palazzo Montecitorio designed by architect Ernesto Basile. ...
- 475 are directly elected in single member districts.
- 155 are elected by regional proportional representation
- 12 will represent Italians residing overseas at the next elections (2006).
The Chamber of Deputies used two ballots. The first ballot elected that district's member, on a purely plurality basis. The second ballot, in which only parties and party-lists were listed, was used to determine the proportional seats, allocated within one single national constituency, with a 4% minimum threshold for party representation. Year 2006 (MMVI) was a common year starting on Sunday (link displays full 2006 calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
A horridly complicated mechanism known as scorporo, a previously unknown word in Italian politics, was used to tabulate PR votes. The number of votes cast for candidates coming in second place on the first ballot (SMD) would be subtracted from the (obviously much larger) number of votes earned on the second ballot (PR) by the party of the winning candidate in the first ballot. This would be repeated for each single-member district. This was developed -- against the overwhelming opinion expressed in the referendums -- to dampen the effect of the first-past-the-post system, which it was feared might promote the prevalence of one political party, especially parties that were strong in one geographical area. The law also introduced a closed list system for the party lists on the second ballot, i.e., excluding voters from the decision as to which members of that party would enter parliament, thereby guaranteeing reelection of party leaders whose popular support was rapidly declining (new elections were to be held once the new electoral law was fully implemented). Ironically, that is what allowed Mario Segni, the leader of the reform movement, to enter parliament on the proportional ballot after the March, 1994, elections, having broken with his party in March, 1993, and then reunited with one of its shattered remnants that December. Closed list describes the variant of party_list proportional representation where voters can (effectively) only vote for political parties as a whole and thus have no influence on the (party-supplied) order in which party candidates are elected. ...
In practice, the system has proven egregiously useless, even for its own corrupt purposes. First-past-the-post candidates usually declare their formal allegiance to some decoy list that will collect no votes, known as liste civetta, thereby relieving their own party of a reduction in votes in the proportional quota. The bypass worked so well that in the elections of 2001 Forza Italia had not enough candidates to fill all the seats it was assigned. The Additional Member System (AMS) is a voting system in which some representatives are elected from geographic constituencies and others are elected under proportional representation from party lists. ...
A national general election was held in Italy on May 13, 2001 to elect members of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate of the Republic. ...
Forza Italia (Forward Italy) is an Italian party. ...
Nor has the system accomplished the goals desired by the voters. The first parliament elected after the electoral reform produced Silvio Berlusconi's first government, which lasted eight months. Small parties still enter parliament and form unstable coalitions. On the other hand, political parties in Italy seem to be coalescing around two poles, if imperfectly so, and governments have lasted much longer, at least by Italian standards. On that level, the electoral reform can be seen as an improvement over the electoral law prior to it, even if Italy has now returned to a PR system.
The 1947-1993 electoral system Between 1947 and 1993, Italy used an electoral system that was a nearly pure proportional representation system, which was subject to two insignificant thresholds: 1) that a party needed to achieve 300,000 votes at the national level; 2) Italy was divided into 27 electoral regions (circoscrizione), of unequal size, which were awarded a certain number of seats in Parliament based on population (e.g., Rome received more than 50). Within these regions, seats were divided proportionally; in order to become a member of parliament, a party member needed to be directly elected within one of these regions - approximately 60,000 votes. This system allocated 90% of the seats in both houses of parliament. The votes that did not go to a winning candidate were then thrown into one national electoral district, which was then divided proportionally and used to determine the remaining 10%, thereby going to candidates not directly elected. Furthermore, voters were able to list their preferences for candidates on a party list, in order to prevent the parties from exploiting the power they acquired from being able to write their party lists. In practice, however, parties were able to manipulate these numbers to that preferred members, i.e., members loyal to one faction within a party, could enter parliament. As neither of these thresholds was difficult to achieve, this system naturally benefitted the small parties. This was exacerbated by the fact that the Lower House has 630 seats. Because of the design of the electoral law did not provide for any mechanism to exclude small parties (indeed it seemed designed to encourage them) or provide any incentives to avoid splintering, by the 1970s the Italian party system had become completely fragmented, with 17 parties represented in parliament in contrast to the eight represented in 1947. This resulted in highly unstable coalition governments (the average length was nine months) and political turbulence. And because voters had little control over which candidates entered parliament, political parties were insulated from the wishes civil society. Relations between political elites and the masses therefore became clientelistic; voter behavior and politics in general became a contest as to which party could secure more pork-barrel investment for a specific region. It also allowed politicians to become corrupt.
Italians living abroad Italian citizens living outside of Italy have always had the right to vote in all referendums and elections being held in Italy (provided they had registered their residence abroad with their relevant consulate). However until late 2001, any citizen wishing to vote, was required to physically return to the city or town in Italy where he or she was registered on the electoral roll. The only exception to this rule was for the Italian elections to the european parliament in which voters could cast their ballot at their nearest consulate but only if they had their residence in one of the other 14 EU countries. This article is being considered for deletion in accordance with Wikipedias deletion policy. ...
Established 1952, as the Common Assembly President Hans-Gert Pöttering (EPP) Since 16 January 2007 Vice-Presidents 14 Rodi Kratsa-Tsagaropoulou (EPP) Alejo Vidal-Quadras (EPP) Gérard Onesta (Greens â EFA) Edward McMillan-Scott (ED) Mario Mauro (EPP) Miguel Angel MartÃnez MartÃnez (PES) Luigi Cocilovo (ALDE) Mechtild...
Until 2001 the Italian state offered citizens living abroad a free return train journey to their home town in Italy in order to vote, however the portion of the train journey that was free of charge was only on Italian soil. Any costs incurred in getting from their place of residence abroad to the Italian border had to be covered by the citizen wanting to vote, therefore a free return train journery was hardly an incentive for the large Italian communities living as far away as in the United States, Argentina or Australia. For this reason very few Italians abroad made use of this right to vote, unless they lived in cities and towns that bordered to Italy such as in Germany, Switzerland, France and Austria. Various Italian minorities living abroad (notably in the United States) protested frequently at this lack of political representation especially if they paid taxes on property owned in Italy. For the record label, see Incentive Records. ...
In politics, representation describes how residents of a country are empowered in the government. ...
After numerous years of petetioning and fierce debate, the Italian government, in late 2001, finally passed a law allowing Italian citizens living abroad to vote in elections in Italy by postal ballot. Italians wishing to excise this right must first register their residence abroad with their relevant consulate. The first vote by Italians living aboard by postal ballot was for 2 referendums in 2003 and for both chambers of the Italian parliament in 2006. In the United States, an absentee ballot is a ballot that the voter receives and (usually) sends through the mail, rather than travelling to a polling place and marking the ballot at a voting booth. ...
References Gilbert, Mark (1995). The Italian Revolution: The End of Politics, Italian Style? Pasquino, Gianfranco (1995). "Die Reform eines Wahlrechtssystems: Der Fall Italien." In Birgitta Nedelmann (1995), Politische Institutionen im Wandel. Koff, Sondra, and Stephen P. Koff (2000). Italy: From the First to the Second Republic. Others. [1] Mudambi, Ram, Navarra, Pietro and Sobbrio, Giuseppe. 2001. Rules, Choice and Strategy: The Political Economy of Italian Electoral Reform. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham (UK) and Northampton, MA (USA).
See also The Politics of Italy takes place in a framework of a parliamentary representative democratic republic, whereby the Prime Minister of Italy is the head of government, and of a pluriform multi-party system. ...
In Italy, the President of the Council of Ministers (Italian: Presidente del Consiglio dei Ministri) is the countrys prime minister or head of government, and occupies the fourth-most important state office. ...
The Roman Senate (Latin: Senatus) was the main governing council of both the Roman Republic, which started in 509 BC, and the Roman Empire. ...
External links | Parliament of Europe | | Sovereign states | Albania · Andorra · Armenia1 · Austria · Azerbaijan2 · Belarus · Belgium · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Bulgaria · Croatia · Cyprus1 · Czech Republic · Denmark · Estonia · Finland · France · Georgia2 · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Ireland · Italy · Kazakhstan2 · Latvia · Liechtenstein · Lithuania · Luxembourg · Republic of Macedonia · Malta · Moldova · Monaco · Montenegro · Netherlands · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Russia2 · San Marino · Serbia · Slovakia · Slovenia · Spain · Sweden · Switzerland · Turkey2 · Ukraine · United Kingdom | Dependencies, autonomies, and other territories | Abkhazia2 · Adjara1 · Akrotiri and Dhekelia · Åland · Azores · Crimea · Faroe Islands · Gibraltar · Guernsey · Jan Mayen · Jersey · Kosovo · Man, Isle of · Madeira3 · Nagorno-Karabakh1 · Nakhchivan1 · South Ossetia2 · Svalbard · Transnistria · Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus1, 4 | 1 Entirely in West Asia, but considered European for cultural, political and historical reasons. 2 Partially or entirely in Asia, depending on the definition of the border between Europe and Asia. 3 Entirely in the African Plate, but considered European for cultural, political and historical reasons. 4 Only recognised by Turkey. Parliament of Europe may refer to: the European Parliament, an institution of the European Union the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, an institution of the Council of Europe Category: ...
This is an alphabetical list of the sovereign states of the world, including both de jure and de facto independent states. ...
The Parliament of the Macedonia, the Assembly (Sobranie), has 120 members, elected for a four year term, by proportional representation. ...
The Parliament of the Republic of Montenegro (Serbian: Skupština Republike Crne Gore) is the legislature of Montenegro. ...
The parliament of Serbia is known as the National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia (Serbian: ÐаÑодна ÑкÑпÑÑина РепÑблике СÑбиÑе). The current Speaker of the National Assembly is Predrag MarkoviÄ (G17 Plus). ...
A dependent territory, dependent area or dependency is a territory that does not possess full political independence or sovereignty as a State. ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
Types of administrative and/or political territories include: A legally administered territory, which is a non-sovereign geographic area that has come under the authority of another government. ...
The Peoples Assembly of Abkhazia is the legislature of the internationally unrecognised Republic of Abkhazia. ...
The Lagting, or Lagtinget, is the parliament of Ã
land, an autonomous, demilitarised and unilingually Swedish territory of Finland. ...
The Verkhovna Rada of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (Ukrainian: ; Russian: ; Crimean Tatar: ; English: ) is the official name of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, Ukraines parliament. ...
Assembly of Kosovo (Serbian Скупштина Косова; Albanian Kuvendi i Kosovës) is the highest provisional self-government and representative and law making institution of Kosovo. ...
The parliament of Nagorno Karabakh, the National Assembly (Azgayin Zhoghov), has 33 members, elected for a five year term in single seat constituencies. ...
The Supreme Council of the Transnistrian Moldovan Republic (Russian: ÐеÑÑ
овнÑй Ð¡Ð¾Ð²ÐµÑ ÐÑиднеÑÑÑовÑкой ÐолдавÑкой РеÑпÑблики, Verkhovny Soviet Pridniestrovskoy Moldavskoy Respubliki) is the parliament of Transnistria. ...
The parliament of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, the Assembly of the Republic (Cumhuriyet Meclisi) has 50 members, elected for a five year term by mitigated proportional representation. ...
A map showing Southwest Asia - The term Middle East is more often used to refer to both Southwest Asia and some North African countries Southwest Asia, or West Asia, is the southwestern part of Asia. ...
The African plate, shown in pinkish-orange The African Plate is a tectonic plate covering the continent of Africa and extending westward to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. ...
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