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2013 Italian general election

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Italian general election, 2013

← 2008 24–25 February 2013 Next →

All 630 seats to the Chamber of Deputies
and 315 (out of the 319) seats to the Senate of the Republic
Turnout75.19%[1]
  First party Second party
 
Leader Pier Luigi Bersani Silvio Berlusconi
Party Democratic Party People of Freedom
Alliance Italy. Common Good Center-right coalition
Leader since 25 October 2009 18 January 1994
Seats won 345 (C)
123 (S)
125 (C)
117 (S)
Popular vote 10,047,507 (coalition) 9,923,100 (coalition)
Percentage 29.5% (coalition) 29.1% (coalition)

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Beppe Grillo Mario Monti
Party Five Star Movement Civic Choice
Alliance Five Star Movement With Monti for Italy
Leader since 4 October 2009 28 December 2012
Seats won 109 (C)
54 (S)
47 (C)
19 (S)
Popular vote 8,688,545 (party) 3,591,560 (coalition)
Percentage 25.5% (party) 10.5% (coalition)

Most voted coalition in each Province for the Chamber of Deputies.

Prime Minister before election

Mario Monti
Civic Choice

Elected Prime Minister

Enrico Letta
Democratic Party

A general election took place on 24–25 February 2013 to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 17th Parliament of the Italian Republic.[2][3] According to results, the centre-left alliance Italy Common Good led by the Democratic Party obtained a clear majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies, thanks to a majority bonus that has effectively trebled the number of seats assigned to the winning force, while in the popular vote it narrowly defeated the centre-right alliance of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. Close behind, the new anti-establishment Five Star Movement of comedian Beppe Grillo became the third force, clearly ahead of the centrist coalition of outgoing Prime Minister Mario Monti. In the Senate, no political group or party won an outright majority, resulting in a hung parliament.[4][5]

Background

Following the European sovereign debt crisis, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi resigned from his position in November 2011. He was replaced as Prime Minister by technocratic Senator for Life Mario Monti.

In December 2012, Berlusconi announced his intention to run for Prime Minister for a fourth time. Shortly after, his party, People of Freedom (PdL), withdrew endorsement for Monti's Cabinet and Monti announced he would resign[6] after sending the annual budget to parliament, which was expected by Christmas. The Constitution of Italy then requires an election to be held within 70 days of the dissolution of parliament by President Giorgio Napolitano. Monti's resignation came after he said that, following the PdL's withdrawal, he "matured [to] the conviction that we could not continue like this any longer,"[7] and that he could not govern with a loss of support for his platform.[8]

During Monti's tenure, Italy had faced tax increases and state spending cuts, as well as reforms intended to improve the competitiveness of the Italian economy.[9] On the other hand, PdL parliamentary party leader Angelino Alfano told parliament on 7 December that Italy's debt, unemployment, and tax rates had risen in contrast to the economy since Monti became prime minister.[7][10] In the approximately one year since Monti took office, unemployment rose by almost two percent.[10] Previously Monti had controversially told the rising tide of youth unemployment to forget about a steady job for life, saying such is "monotonous [anyway and] it's nice to change and take on challenges." He also called for changes to Article 18 of the 1970 Workers Statute that forbids companies with over 15 employees from sacking an employee without "just cause", saying that it "can be pernicious for Italy's growth."[11]

The same reforms and austerity-focused policies which upset many Italians are perceived to have improved international confidence in Italy.[12] Monti was supported by other Eurozone leaders, such as Germany's Angela Merkel and former French President Nicolas Sarkozy.[13] Merkel's spokesman, Georg Streiter, said that she had "always worked well" with Monti and "had a relationship of esteem"; however, when asked about Berlusconi, he said it was not up to him to decide domestic politics of other countries.[14] German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble added that he did not foresee "any destabilisation in the eurozone [but] expect[ed] Italy to keep going forward by respecting its European commitments."[15] In reaction, financial markets fell on speculation of further instability;[16][17] while, specifically, Italian 10-year bond yields rose by 0.4% to reach 4.87% and the Italian stock exchange's flagship index dropped by over 3.5%.[18]

Campaign

From the summer of 2012, a number of parties and movements from the so-called "Third Pole" of the political spectrum, including Pier Ferdinando Casini's Union of the Centre (UdC), Gianfranco Fini's Future and Freedom (FLI), Luca Cordero di Montezemolo's Toward the Third Republic (VTR), as well as a number of other politicians from both PD and PdL, pushed for direct involvement of Mario Monti in an election. Monti's statement that he would resign after the budget was passed, was suggested by Reuters to be indicative of him seeking to run for office.

Monti also told a press conference in France that "populism" was dangerous, and he further said that a failure to pass the budget "would render more serious the government crisis, also at a European level" and that his resignation would then be "irrevocable." The two largest parties in parliament, the PdL and the Democratic Party (PD) said they would be willing to work together to expedite passage of the budget. PD Secretary Pier Luigi Bersani said: "Faced with the irresponsibility of the right that betrayed a commitment it made a year ago before the whole country...Monti responded with an act of dignity that we profoundly respect." PD Deputy Secretary Enrico Letta said of the PdL's withdrawal from the government that "the financial markets will judge this latest outburst by Berlusconi and they certainly will not judge it positively." Bersani had won the centre-left primary election shortly before the PdL withdrew from the government.[13] Following a defeat in the primary, Mayor of Florence Matteo Renzi ruled out an approach, in writing, from Berlusconi's PdL to join the party during the election. In the following weeks, both PD and Left Ecology Freedom (SEL) announced their intention to hold primary elections for MP candidates on 29 and 30 December.

The possibility of Monti directly involving himself in the election was seen as increasingly likely after the government crisis in December later that year, as Monti was invited to a European People's Party meeting at which Berlusconi was present too. A few days later, Monti published a political agenda for Italy, dubbed the "Monti agenda", and offered it to all political parties. After the Third Pole promptly agreed to use it as their own platform for the upcoming elections, talks started regarding a direct involvement of Monti as premiership candidate. On 28 December 2012, following a 4-hour meeting and after being publicly backed by the Vatican regarding a potential bid, Monti publicly announced his candidacy as head of the Third Pole, which ran in the Senate as a unique component provisionally named "Monti's Agenda for Italy", and in the Lower House as a coalition of several components.[19]

Berlusconi said the platform his party would run on includes opposition to Monti's economic performance, which he said put Italy into a "recessive spiral without end." He also told the media, on the sidelines of AC Milan's practice session (the football club he owns along with Mediaset, the largest media outlet in the country): ""I race to win. To win, everyone said there had to be a tested leader. It's not that we did not look for one. We did, and how! But there isn't one...I'm doing it out of a sense of responsibility." Berlusconi and Five Star Movement (M5S) leader Beppe Grillo criticised the eurozone and Germany's influence on European policy. Grillo wrote that the average Italian "is literally terrified about the prospects of five more years of Monti-like rule."[20]

On 8 December 2012, a new political party formed around a think tank named "Fermare il Declino" (Stop the Decline), on an initiative by the economic journalist Oscar Giannino and supported by various economists. On 19 December 2012, the name "FARE per Fermare il Declinio" ("ACT to Stop The Decline") was chosen, and a list was presented with Oscar Giannino as PM candidate. The party's programme[21] was also introduced, roughly inspiring to reduce the role of the State in the economy, reduce the national debt through disposing redundant assets, and to propose market liberalizations and privatizations.

On 29 December 2012, a new coalition, Civil Revolution (RC), was formed with the support of Italy of Values (IdV), Orange Movement (MA), Federation of the Left (FdS), and Federation of the Greens (FdV). It is led by celebrity magistrate Antonio Ingroia and Mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris. FdS co-leader Paolo Ferrero said it would be a "Fourth Pole" that would bring new hope for the left.[22] Civil Revolution attempted to solicit M5S to join them, saying "the door is open." Grillo, however, turned them down, writing on his blog "... the door is open for M5S? Well, thank you, but close the door again, please."[23]

On 7 January 2013, Berlusconi announced he had penned a coalition agreement with Lega Nord (LN); as part of it, PdL will support Roberto Maroni's bid for the presidency of Lombardy, and he will run as "leader of the coalition", but suggested he could accept a role as Minister of Economy under a cabinet headed by another People of Freedom member, such as Angelino Alfano.[24] Later that day, LN leader Maroni confirmed his party will not support a new candidacy of Berlusconi as Prime Minister in the case of an electoral win.[25]

Electoral system

The current election system is a form of party-list proportional representation with a series of thresholds to encourage parties to form coalitions. Italy is divided into 26 districts for the Chamber of Deputies and 20 regions for the Senate. Each district is assigned a number of seats in proportion to its share of the population. To guarantee a working majority, the coalition or party that obtains a plurality of the vote, but fewer than 340 seats, is assigned additional seats to reach that number, which roughly is about 54 percent of all seats. Inside each coalition, seats are divided between parties by the largest remainder method.[26]

The coalition or party that wins a plurality in a region is guaranteed 55 percent of the region's Senate seats. As this mechanism is region-based, opposing parties or coalitions may benefit from it in different regions. It therefore does not guarantee any party or coalition a majority in the Senate.[26]

Coalitions and electoral lists

The coalitions and main electoral lists are:

Coalitions consisting of several lists
Unitary electoral lists
Political force or alliance Constituent lists Leader
rowspan="9" bgcolor="Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color"| 
Italy. Common Good
(Italia. Bene Comune)
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party (Partito Democratico)
Pier Luigi Bersani
bgcolor="Template:Left Ecology Freedom/meta/color" | Left Ecology Freedom (Sinistra Ecologia Libertà)
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Centre (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Centre (Centro Democratico)
bgcolor="Template:Italian Socialist Party (2007)/meta/color" | Italian Socialist Party (Partito Socialista Italiano) – only for Senate in: Lazio, Campania and Calabria[36]
South Tyrolean People's Party (Südtiroler Volkspartei: SVP)[37][38] – only in: Trentino-Alto Adige
Trentino Tyrolean Autonomist Party (Partito Autonomista Trentino Tirolese: PATT)[37][38] – only for Senate in: Trentino-Alto Adige
Union for Trentino (Unione Per il Trentino: UPT)[39] – only for Senate in: Trentino-Alto Adige
(Please note that the party instead opted to be part of the Monti-coalition in the "Chamber of Deputies election")[40][41]
Moderates for Piedmont (Moderati per il Piemonte) – only for Senate in: Piedmont
The Megaphone (Il Megafono) – only for Senate in: Sicily[42]
 
Centre-right coalition
bgcolor="Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color" | The People of Freedom (Il Popolo della Libertà)
Silvio Berlusconi
bgcolor="Template:Lega Nord/meta/color" | Northern League (Lega Nord) incl. Labour and Freedom List (Lista Lavoro e Libertà)
bgcolor="Template:The Right/meta/color" | The Right (La Destra)
bgcolor="Template:Brothers of Italy/meta/color" | Brothers of Italy (Fratelli d'Italia – Centrodestra Nazionale)
Great SouthMpA (Grande Sud–MpA)
Italian Moderates in Revolution (Moderati Italiani in Rivoluzione)
Popular Agreement (Intesa Popolare)
Pensioners' Party (Partito Pensionati)
style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"| 
Five Star Movement
(Movimento 5 Stelle)
bgcolor="Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color" | Five Star Movement (Movimento 5 Stelle)
Beppe Grillo
(not candidate)
rowspan=4 style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"| 
With Monti for Italy
(Con Monti per l'Italia)
bgcolor="Template:Civic Choice/meta/color" | Civic Choice (Scelta Civica)
Mario Monti
bgcolor="Template:Union of the Centre (2008)/meta/color" | Union of Christian and Centre Democrats (Unione dei Democratici Cristiani e di Centro)
bgcolor="Template:Future and Freedom/meta/color" | Future and Freedom (Futuro e Libertà)
Union for Trentino (Unione Per il Trentino: UPT) – only for Chamber of Deputies in: Trentino-Alto Adige
(Please note that the party leader Lorenzo Dellai – who became elected to the Chambers of Deputies – did not run the election with his own party list but was elected through the Civic Choice list,[40][41] and that the UPT party was part of the Bersani-coalition in the election for the Senate)[39]
style="background-color:Template:Orange Movement/meta/color"| 
Civil Revolution
(Rivoluzione Civile)
bgcolor="Template:Orange Movement/meta/color" | Unitary list of Italy of Values, Federation of the Left (Communist Refoundation Party + Party of Italian Communists), Orange Movement, and Federation of the Greens
Antonio Ingroia
style="background-color:Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color"| 
Act to Stop the Decline
(Fare per Fermare il Declino)
bgcolor="Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color" | Stop the Decline (Fermare il Declino)
Oscar Giannino

Opinion polls

Results for Chamber of Deputies

Italy (19 regions out of 20)

Coalition Party Votes % Seats
rowspan="5" bgcolor="Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color"|  Pier Luigi Bersani:
Italy. Common Good
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party 8,644,187 25.42 292
bgcolor="Template:Left Ecology Freedom/meta/color" | Left Ecology Freedom 1,089,442 3.20 37
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Centre (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Centre 167,170 0.49 6
South Tyrolean People's Party 146,804 0.43 5
Total 10,047,603 29.54 340
  Silvio Berlusconi:
Center-right coalition
bgcolor="Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color" | The People of Freedom 7,332,667 21.56 97
bgcolor="Template:Lega Nord/meta/color" | Lega Nord 1,390,156 4.08 18
bgcolor="Template:Brothers of Italy/meta/color" | Brothers of Italy 666,035 1.95 9
bgcolor="Template:The Right/meta/color" | The Right 219,816 0.64 0
Great SouthMovement for Autonomies 148,534 0.43 0
Italian Moderates in Revolution 81,982 0.24 0
Pensioners' Party 55,050 0.16 0
Popular Agreement 25,631 0.07 0
Independents for a Fair Italy 3,238 0.00 0
Total 9,923,109 29.18 124
style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"|  Beppe Grillo: Five Star Movement 8,689,168 25.55 108
rowspan=4 style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"|  Mario Monti:
With Monti for Italy
bgcolor="Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color" | Civic Choice 2,824,001 8.30 37[a]
bgcolor="Template:Union of the Centre (2008)/meta/color" | Union of Christian and Centre Democrats 608,199 1.78 8
bgcolor="Template:Future and Freedom/meta/color" | Future and Freedom 159,429 0.46 0
Total 3,591,629 10.56 45
style="background-color:Template:Civil Revolution/meta/color"|  Civil Revolution 765,172 2.25 0
style="background-color:Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color"|  Act to Stop the Decline 380,937 1.12 0
style="background-color:Template:Communist Party of Italy/meta/color"|  Workers' Communist Party 89,995 0.26 0
  New Force 89,826 0.26 0
style="background-color:Template:Italian Radicals/meta/color"|  Amnesty, Justice, Freedom 64,732 0.19 0
  The Freedomites 48,317 0.14 0
  CasaPound 47,691 0.14 0
  Tricolour Flame 44,753 0.13 0
  I Love Italy 42,529 0.12 0
  Venetian Independence 33,274 0.09 0
  Liberals for Italy – PLI 28,026 0.08 0
  Sardinian Action Party 18,585 0.05 0
  Venetian Republic League 15,838 0.04 0
  Voto di Protesta 12,744 0.03 0
  Veneto State 11,378 0.03 0
style="background-color:Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color"|  Italian Reformists 8,223 0.02 0
  Indipendenza per la Sardegna 7,598 0.02 0
  Italian Republican Party 7,143 0.02 0
  MERIS 5,901 0.01 0
  Communist Alternative Party 5,159 0.01 0
  The Pirates 4,557 0.01 0
  Movimento Progetto Italia 3,967 0.01 0
  Rifondazione Missina Italiana 3,178 0.00 0
  United Populars 2,992 0.00 0
  Progetto Nazionale 2,865 0.00 0
  Movimento PPA 1,526 0.00 0
  Unione Popolare 1,515 0.00 0
  Tutti Insieme per L'Italia 1,452 0,00 0
  Staminali D'Italia 585 0,00 0
  Democrazia Atea 556 0,00 0
Invalid/blank/unassigned votes 1,269,018
Total 35,271,540 100 617
Registered voters/turnout 46,906,343 75.19
Source: Ministry of the Interior
Notes
  1. ^ Incl. the Union for Trentino (UPT) party leader Lorenzo Dellai, who decided not to submit his own party list for the Monti-coalition, but opted to be a direct part of the Civic Choice list.[40][41]

Aosta Valley

The semi-autonomous region of Aosta Valley, in northwestern Italy, elects one member to the Chamber of Deputies through a direct first-past-the-post election. Some parties that formed electoral coalitions in Italy, might have opted to run against one another (or form different coalitions) in this particular region.

Candidate[43] Party (or a unified coalition list) Total votes % Seats
Rudi Marguerettaz (SA) Aosta Valley List (UV-SA-FA) 18,376 25.36 1
Laurent Viérin Progressive Valdotanian Union 18,191 25.11 0
Jean Pierre Guichardaz Autonomy Liberty Participation Ecology (ALPE) 14,340 19.79 0
Roberto Ugo Massimo Cognetta Five Star Movement 13,403 18.50 0
Giorgia Meloni bgcolor="Template:Brothers of Italy/meta/color" | Brothers of Italy 3,051 4.21 0
Nicoletta Spelgatti bgcolor="Template:Lega Nord/meta/color" | Lega Nord 2,384 3.29 0
Lucia Bringhen bgcolor="Template:Union of the Centre (2008)/meta/color" | Union of Christian and Centre Democrats 1,355 1.87 0
Fabrizio Buillet bgcolor="Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color" | Act to Stop the Decline 748 1.03 0
Andrea Ladu CasaPound 443 0.61 0
Eros Campion Nation Val d'Outa 145 0.20 0
Total valid votes 72,436
Blank/void/unassigned votes 4,733
Total votes 77,169 100 1
Registered voters/turnout 100,277 76.95
Source: Ministry of the Interior

Italians abroad

Twelve members of the Chamber of Deputies are elected by Italians abroad. Two members are elected for North America and Central America (including most of the Caribbean), four members for South America (including Trinidad and Tobago), five members for Europe, and one member for the rest of the world (Africa, Asia, Oceania, and Antarctica). Voters in these regions select candidate lists and may also cast a preference vote for individual candidates. The seats are allocated by proportional representation.

The election law allow for parties to form other electoral coalitions on the lists abroad, compared to the lists in Italy. In the 2013 election, this freedom was used by Left Ecology Freedom to provide a list as an independent party, instead of making themselve available as part of the mainlands coalition with Democratic Party.

Party (or a unified coalition list) Votes % Seats
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party 288,092 29.32 5[a]
bgcolor="Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"| With Monti for Italy 180,674 18.39 2[b]
bgcolor="Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color" | The People of Freedom 145,824 14.84 1[c]
  Associative Movement Italians Abroad (MAIE) 140,473 14.30 2[d]
bgcolor="Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color" | Five Star Movement 95,041 9.67 1[e]
  South American Union Italian Emigrants (USEI) 44,024 4.48 1[f]
  Italians for Liberty 22,321 2.27 0
bgcolor="Template:Left Ecology Freedom/meta/color"|  Left Ecology Freedom 17,375 1.76 0
style="background:Template:Civil Revolution/meta/color"|  Civil Revolution 15,910 1.61 0
  Unione Italiani Sudamerica 11,470 1.16 0
style="background-color:Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color"|  Act to Stop the Decline 10,160 1.03 0
  Communist Party – Popular Left 7,073 0.72 0
  Insieme Per Gli Italiani 3,890 0.39 0
Invalid/blank/unassigned votes 115,145
Total 1,039,725 100 12
Registered voters/turnout 3,494,687 29.75
Source: Ministry of the Interior
Notes
  1. ^ The 5 deputies from Democratic Party were elected by the following regions: Europe (2), North- and Central America (1), South America (1), remaining world (1).[44]
  2. ^ The 2 deputies from the Monti-coalition were elected by the following regions: Europe (1), North- and Central America (1).[44]
  3. ^ The deputy from the Berlusconi-coalition was elected by the following region: Europe (1).[44]
  4. ^ The 2 deputies from MAIE were elected by the following region: South America (2).[44]
  5. ^ The deputy from the Five Star Movement was elected by the following region: Europe (1).[44]
  6. ^ The deputy from USEI was elected by the following region: South America (1).[44]

Seat totals

Coalition Party Seats
rowspan="5" bgcolor="Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color"|  Pier Luigi Bersani:
Italy. Common Good
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party (PD) 297
bgcolor="Template:Left Ecology Freedom/meta/color" | Left Ecology Freedom (SEL) 37
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Centre (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Centre (CD) 6
South Tyrolean People's Party (SVP) 5
Total 345
  Silvio Berlusconi:
Center-right coalition
bgcolor="Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color" | The People of Freedom (PdL) 98
bgcolor="Template:Lega Nord/meta/color" | Lega Nord (LN) 18
bgcolor="Template:Brothers of Italy/meta/color" | Brothers of Italy (FdI) 9
Total 125
style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"|  Beppe Grillo: Five Star Movement (M5S) 109
rowspan=4 style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"|  Mario Monti:
With Monti for Italy
bgcolor="Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color" | Civic Choice (SC) 37[a]
bgcolor="Template:Union of the Centre (2008)/meta/color" | Union of Christian and Centre Democrats (UDC) 8
bgcolor="Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color" | With Monti for Italy (SC abroad) 2
Total 47
  Associative Movement Italians Abroad (MAIE) 2
  South American Union Italian Emigrants (USEI) 1
  Aosta Valley List (APF) Edelweiss Aosta Valley (SA) 1
Total 630
Notes
  1. ^ Incl. the Union for Trentino (UPT) party leader Lorenzo Dellai, who decided not to submit his own party list for the Monti-coalition, but opted to be a direct part of the Civic Choice list.[40][41]

Overall result

Popular vote and parliamentary seats in the Chamber of deputies.

Composition of the elected Chamber of deputies. The Bersani-led coalition (illustrated by dark red, red, orange and black) won the plurality in the nationwide election with a 0.4% lead over the nearest coalition, and thus – as defined by the Italian election law – was granted a majority bonus equal to an automatic 55% of the seats in the Chamber of deputies.
Popular vote (C)
Italy. Common Good
29.5%
Centre-right coalition
29.1%
5 Star Movement
25.5%
With Monti for Italy
10.5%
Others
5.4%
Distribution of the 630 parliamentary seats (C)
Italy. Common Good
54.8%
Centre-right coalition
19.8%
5 Star Movement
17.3%
With Monti for Italy
7.5%
Others
0.6%

Results for the Senate of the Republic

Italy (18 regions out of 20)

Coalition Party Votes % Seats
rowspan=7 bgcolor="Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color"|  Pier Luigi Bersani: Italy. Common Good bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party 8,400,255 27.43 105
bgcolor=Template:Left Ecology Freedom/meta/color | Left Ecology Freedom 912,374 2.97 7
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Centre (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Centre 163,427 0.53 0
The Megaphone – List of Rosario Crocetta 138,581 0.45 1
bgcolor="Template:Italian Socialist Party (2007)/meta/color" | Italian Socialist Party 57,688 0.18 0
Moderates 14,358 0.04 0
Total 9,686,683 31.63 113
  Silvio Berlusconi: Centre-right coalition bgcolor="Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color" | The People of Freedom 6,829,373 22.30 98
bgcolor="Template:Lega Nord/meta/color" | Lega Nord 1,328,555 4.33 17
bgcolor="Template:Brothers of Italy/meta/color" | Brothers of Italy 590,083 1.92 0
bgcolor="Template:The Right/meta/color" | The Right 221,112 0.72 0
Pensioners' Party 123,458 0.40 0
Great South 122,100 0.39 1
Italian Moderates in Revolution (MIR) 69,649 0.22 0
bgcolor="Template:Movement for Autonomies/meta/color" | Movement for Autonomies – Party of Sicilian (MPA) 48,618 0.15 0
Intesa Popolare (Understanding People) 24,979 0.08 0
Cantiere Popolare 21,685 0.07 0
Basta Tasse 19,298 0.06 0
Independents for a Fair Italy 6,769 0.02 0
Total 9,405,679 30.71 116
style=background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color| Beppe Grillo: Five Star Movement 7,285,850 23.79 54
style="background-color:Template:Civic Choice/meta/color"| Mario Monti: With Monti for Italy 2,797,486 9.13 18
style="background-color:Template:Civil Revolution/meta/color"| Antonio Ingroia: Civil Revolution 549,987 1.79 0
style="background-color:Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color"| Act to Stop the Decline 278,396 0.90 0
style="background-color:Template:Communist Party of Italy/meta/color"| Workers' Communist Party 113,935 0.37 0
style="background-color:Template:New Force/meta/color"| New Force 81,519 0.26 0
style="background-color:Template:Italian Radicals/meta/color"| Amnesty, Justice, Freedom 63,149 0.20 0
Tricolour Flame 52,106 0.17 0
I Love Italy 40,781 0.13 0
CasaPound 40,540 0.13 0
Venetian Independence 29,696 0.09 0
Liga Veneta Repubblica 20,381 0.06 0
Ottavio Pasqualucci Dimezziamo lo Stipendo ai Politici 7,968 0.02 0
No alla chiusura degli ospedali 7,547 0.02 0
Viva L'Italia 4,759 0.01 0
Total 20,274 0.06 0
Sardinian Action Party 18,602 0.06 0
Civilta' Rurale Sviluppo 13,945 0.04 0
Rialzati Abruzzo 11,817 0.03 0
Marxist–Leninist Italian Communist Party 9,604 0.03 0
Veneto State 8,950 0.02 0
Italian Republican Party 8,476 0.02 0
Donne per L'Italia 7,610 0.02 0
Indipendenza per la Sardegna 7,494 0.02 0
Padanian Union 7,324 0.02 0
Popular Unity 6,583 0.02 0
The Pirates 6,265 0.02 0
style="background-color:Template:People of Freedom/meta/color"| Italian Reformists 5,952 0.01 0
MERIS 5,580 0.01 0
Communist Alternative Party 5,176 0.01 0
PAS – FBLB&LT 4,522 0.01 0
  Progetto Nazionale 3,822 0.01 0
  La Base 3,386 0.01 0
  Tutti Insieme per L'Italia 3,155 0.01 0
  Rifondazione Missina Italiana 2,717 0.00 0
  Movimento Eudonna 2,689 0.00 0
  Costruire Democrazia 2,635 0.00 0
  Movimento Progetto Italia 1,451 0.00 0
  Partito Del Sud 1,276 0.00 0
  Movimento Naturalista Italiano 1,170 0.00 0
  Communita' Lucana 882 0.00 0
Invalid/blank votes 1,133,805
Total 31,751,350 100 301
Registered voters/turnout 42,271,967 75.11
Source: Ministry of the Interior

Trentino-Alto Adige/South Tyrol

The semi-autonomous region of Trentino-Alto Adige in north Italy, including South Tyrol, elects seven members to the Italian Senate through its six constituencies. Each constituency elects one senator by first-past-the post, except for the Pergine Valsugana constituency in which two senate seats are filled proportionally. Some parties that formed electoral coalitions in Italy, might have opted to run against one another (or form different coalitions) in this particular region.

Elected candidates Party (or a unified coalition list) Total votes % Seats
Franco Panizza (PATT)
Giorgio Tonini (PD)
Vittorio Fravezzi (UPT)
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | SVPPATTPDUPT (only Trentino) 127,656 23.43 3
Sergio Divina (LN) bgcolor="Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color" | The People of FreedomLega Nord 85,298 15.65 1
Five Star Movement 82,499 15.14 0
Karl Johann (Hans) Berger (SVP) SVP (only Brixen constituency) 54,474 9.99 1
Francesco Palermo (PD) bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | PDSVP (only Bolzano constituency) 47,623 8.74 1
Karl Zeller (SVP) SVP (only Merano constituency) 42,667 7.83 1
The Libertarians (only South Tyrol) 42,094 7.72 0
bgcolor="Template:Civil Revolution/meta/color" | Civil Revolution 11,262 2.06 0
bgcolor="Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color" | Act to Stop the Decline (only Bolzano constituency and Trentino) 8,796 1.61 0
Greens (only Brixen constituency) 6,686 1.22 0
Greens (only Merano constituency) 6,122 1.12 0
Tyrol in the heart (Urzi) (only South Tyrol) 4,672 0.85 0
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party (PD) (only Brixen constituency) 4,478 0.82 0
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party (PD) (only Merano constituency) 4,319 0.79 0
bgcolor="Template:Civic Choice/meta/color" | Civic Choice (SC-Monti) (only Brixen constituency) 4,016 0.73 0
bgcolor="Template:Civic Choice/meta/color" | Civic Choice (SC-Monti) (only Merano constituency) 3,630 0.66 0
Italian Moderates in Revolution (MIR) (only Trentino) 3,414 0.62 0
bgcolor="Template:Brothers of Italy/meta/color" | Brothers of Italy (only Bolzano constituency) 2,365 0.43 0
bgcolor="Template:The Right/meta/color" | The Right (LD) (only South Tyrol) 1,181 0.21 0
CasaPound (only Bolzano constituency) 1,160 0.21 0
Party for all (only Bolzano constituency) 426 0.07 0
Total valid votes 544,838
Blank/void/unassigned votes 30,437
Total votes 575,275 100 7
Registered voters/turnout 707,666 81.29
Source: Ministry of the Interior

Aosta Valley

The semi-autonomous region of Aosta Valley, in northwestern Italy, elects one member to the Senate through a direct first-past-the-post election. Some parties that formed electoral coalitions in Italy, might have opted to run against one another (or form different coalitions) in this particular region.

Candidate[45] Party (or a unified coalition list) Total votes % Seats
Albert Lanièce (UV) Aosta Valley List (UV-SA-FA) 24,609 37.03 1
Carlo Perrin Autonomy Liberty Participation Ecology (ALPE) 20,430 30.75 0
Five Star Movement 13,760 20.71 0
Sergio Ferrero bgcolor="Template:Lega Nord/meta/color" | Lega Nord 2,608 3.92 0
bgcolor="Template:The Right/meta/color" | The Right 2,014 3.03 0
bgcolor="Template:Union of the Centre (2008)/meta/color" | Union of the Centre 1,594 2.39 0
bgcolor="Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color" | Act to Stop the Decline 814 1.22 0
CasaPound 424 0.63 0
Nation Val d'Outa 186 0.27 0
Total valid votes 66,439
Blank/void/unassigned votes 5,280
Total votes 71,719 100 1
Registered voters/turnout 93,040 77.08
Source: Ministry of the Interior

Italians abroad

Six members of the Senate are elected by Italians abroad. One member is elected for North America and Central America (including most of the Caribbean), two members for South America (including Trinidad and Tobago), two members for Europe, and one member for the rest of the world (Africa, Asia, Oceania, and Antarctica). Voters in these regions select candidate lists and may also cast a preference vote for individual candidates. The seats are allocated by proportional representation.

The election law allow for parties to form other electoral coalitions on the lists abroad, compared to the lists in Italy. In the 2013 electional list for the Senate all parties were listed independently without any coalitions formed. None of the parties were neither in internal coalitions at the mainland; so in 2013 the electoral situation abroad actually was not different compared to the electoral situation at the mainland.

Party (or a unified coalition list) Votes % Seats
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party 274,732 30.7 4[a]
bgcolor="Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"| With Monti for Italy (FLI) 177,402 19.8 1[b]
bgcolor="Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color" | The People of Freedom 136,052 15.2 0
  Associative Movement Italians Abroad (MAIE) 120,290 13.4 1[c]
bgcolor="Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color" | Five Star Movement 89,562 10.0 0
  Unione Sudamericana Emigrati Italiani (USEI) 38,223 4.3 0
  Italians for Liberty 15,260 1.7 0
bgcolor="Template:Civil Revolution/meta/color"|  Civil Revolution 14,134 1.6 0
  Unione Italiani Sudamerica 10,881 1.2 0
style="background-color:Template:Stop the Decline/meta/color"|  Act to Stop the Decline 7,892 0.9 0
  Communist Party – Popular Left 7,578 0.8 0
  Insieme Per Gli Italiani 3,223 0.4 0
Invalid/blank/unassigned votes 108,150
Total 948,067 100 6
Registered voters/turnout 3,149,501 30.1
Source: Ministry of the Interior
Notes
  1. ^ The 4 senators from Democratic Party were elected by the following regions: Europe (1), North- and Central America (1), South America (1), remaining world (1).[46]
  2. ^ Aldo Di Biagio, The senator from the Monti-coalition (FLI) was elected by the following region: Europe (1).[46]
  3. ^ The senator from MAIE was elected by the following region: South America (1).[46]

Seat totals

Coalition Party Seats
rowspan="7" bgcolor="Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color"|  Pier Luigi Bersani:
Italy. Common Good
bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party (Italy)/meta/color" | Democratic Party (PD) 111
bgcolor="Template:Left Ecology Freedom/meta/color" | Left Ecology Freedom (SEL) 7
South Tyrolean People's Party (SVP) 2
Trentino Tyrolean Autonomist Party (PATT) 1
Union for Trentino (UPT) 1
The Megaphone – List of Rosario Crocetta (IM-LC) 1
Total 123
  Silvio Berlusconi:
Center-right coalition
bgcolor="Template:The People of Freedom/meta/color" | The People of Freedom (PdL) 98
bgcolor="Template:Lega Nord/meta/color" | Lega Nord (LN) 18
Great South (GS) 1
Total 117
style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"|  Beppe Grillo: Five Star Movement (M5S) 54
style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"|  Mario Monti: With Monti for Italy 19
  Associative Movement Italians Abroad (MAIE) 1
  Aosta Valley List (APF) Union Valdôtaine (UV) 1
Total 315

Overall result

Popular vote and parliamentary seats in the Senate of the Republic.

Composition of the elected Senate of the Republic. The Bersani-led coalition (illustrated by 7 dark red, 111 red, 4 black and 1 lightblue seats) won the plurality in the nationwide election with a 0.9% lead over the nearest coalition. For the Senate, no automatic majority bonus is however granted for the coalition winning the plurality, and thus the Bersani-led coalition only won 39.1% of seats in the Senate.
Popular vote (S)
Italy. Common Good
31.6%
Centre-right coalition
30.7%
5 Star Movement
23.8%
With Monti for Italy
9.1%
Others
5.4%
Distribution of the 315 parliamentary seats (S)
Italy. Common Good
39.1%
Centre-right coalition
37.1%
5 Star Movement
17.1%
With Monti for Italy
6.0%
Others
0.6%

By region

Vote result for the Senate in each Italian region.

Province Total
seats
Coalition results List apportionment
Coalition seats Percentage Party seats
style="background:Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color;color:white;"|IBC CD style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"|Monti style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"|M5S Other style="background:Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color;color:white;"|IBC CD style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"|Monti style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"|M5S Other style="background:Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color;color:white;"|IBC CD style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"|Monti style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"|M5S Other
Piedmont 22 13 4 2 3 0 29.8 29.3 11.6 25.7 3.5 PD 13 PdL 3 LN 1 Monti 2 M5S 3 0
Aosta Valley 1 0 0 0 0 VdA 1 7.0 2.4 20.7 69.9 0 0 0 0 UV 1
Lombardy 49 11 27 4 7 0 29.7 37.6 10.7 17.4 4.4 PD 11 PdL 16 LN 11 Monti 4 M5S 7 0
Trentino-Alto Adige 7 6 1 0 0 0 50.6 16.3 1.4 15.1 13.7 PD 2 SVP 2
PATT 1 UPT 1
LN 1 0 0 0
Veneto 24 4 14 2 4 0 25.0 32.9 11.0 24.6 6.2 PD 4 PdL 9 LN 5 Monti 2 M5S 4 0
Friuli-Venezia Giulia 7 4 1 1 1 0 29.3 28.8 12.3 25.5 4.2 PD 4 PdL 1 Monti 1 M5S 1 0
Liguria 8 5 1 1 1 0 33.0 24.1 9.4 30.3 3.1 PD 5 PdL 1 Monti 1 M5S 1 0
Emilia-Romagna 22 13 4 1 4 0 42.1 21.3 8.9 23.1 4.5 PD 13 PdL 4 Monti 1 M5S 4 0
Tuscany 18 10 3 1 4 0 43.5 21.3 8.1 22.7 4.4 PD 9 SEL 1 PdL 3 Monti 1 M5S 4 0
Umbria 7 4 1 1 1 0 37.6 25.2 8.3 25.3 3.4 PD 4 PdL 1 Monti 1 M5S 1 0
Marche 8 5 1 1 1 0 33.2 22.2 10.0 30.3 4.2 PD 5 PdL 1 Monti 1 M5S 1 0
Lazio 28 16 6 0 6 0 32.3 28.9 7.5 25.9 5.4 PD 14 SEL 2 PdL 6 0 M5S 6 0
Abruzzo 7 1 4 0 2 0 28.1 29.6 7.5 28.4 6.4 PD 1 PdL 4 0 M5S 2 0
Molise 2 1 1 0 0 0 30.3 30.1 8.4 26.6 4.6 PD 1 PdL 1 0 0 0
Campania 29 6 16 2 5 0 29.0 38.4 8.2 20.7 4.6 PD 5 SEL 1 PdL 16 Monti 2 M5S 5 0
Apulia 20 4 11 1 4 0 28.5 34.4 9.1 24.1 3.9 PD 3 SEL 1 PdL 11 Monti 1 M5S 4 0
Basilicata 7 4 1 1 1 0 36.7 25.3 8.4 22.9 6.8 PD 3 SEL 1 PdL 1 Monti 1 M5S 1 0
Calabria 10 2 6 0 2 0 31.7 33.3 7.6 22.2 5.2 PD 2 PdL 5 GS 1 0 M5S 2 -
Sicily 25 5 14 0 6 0 27.3 33.4 5.9 29.5 3.9 PD 4 IM-LC 1 PdL 14 0 M5S 6 0
Sardinia 8 5 1 0 2 0 31.7 25.5 6.6 28.7 7.5 PD 4 SEL 1 PdL 1 0 M5S 2 0
Expats 6 4 0 1 0 MAIE 1 30.69 15.2 19.8 10.0 26.0 PD 4 0 Monti 1 0 MAIE 1
Total 315 style="background:Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color;color:white;"|123 117 style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"|19 style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"|54 2 style="background:Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color;color:white;"| – style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"| – style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"| – style="background:Template:Italy. Common Good/meta/color;color:white;"|PD 111, SEL 7
SVP 2, PATT 1
UPT 1, IM-LC 1
PdL 98,
LN 18, GS 1
style="background-color:Template:With Monti for Italy/meta/color"|Monti 19 style="background-color:Template:Five Star Movement/meta/color"|M5S 54 UV 1
MAIE 1

Source: Ministry of Interior[47]

Reaction

Media analysis of the result was one of political stalemate. Although Italy Common Good has a solid majority in the Chamber of Deputies, in Italy a party or coalition must have a majority in the Senate as well in order to pass legislation, as the upper and lower house hold equal power. Bersani said that Italy was in a "dramatic situation". Italian and global shares fell as the result became clear, with the value of the euro also dropping.[48] Strong results for anti-austerity parties were interpreted as showing popular opposition to the austerity measures of the Monti government,[49] with the populist Five Star Movement considered to have had a strong election.[50] Analysts were uncertain as to how this new party would behave in the legislature.[50]

On 26 February La Repubblica ran the headline "Boost for Grillo: Italy ungovernable",[51] whilst Il Giornale described Berlusconi's result as a "miracle".[52] Il Messaggero declared that "The winner is ungovernability".[52]

Government formation

Formal talks to form a new government were expected to start on 10 March with the official confirmation of the results and the convening of parliament.[50] On 24 April, the Democratic Party's deputy secretary Enrico Letta was named as prime minister.[53]

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