User:Yakme/sandbox/Italian general election infobox

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Proposals[edit]

Proposal A[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (−2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (−2.1 pp)
 
No image.svg
No image.svg
No image.svg
Alliance Centre-right Five Star Movement Centre-left
Seats won 265 (C· 137 (S) 227 (C· 112 (S) 122 (C· 60 (S)
Seat change +138 (C· +20 (S) +114 (C· +58 (S) –227 (C· −65 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
Swing +7.8 pp (C)
+6.8 pp (S)
+7.1 pp (C)
+8.4 pp (S)
−6.7 pp (C)
−8.6 pp (S)

Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).
Chamber of Deputies
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.35 125 +107
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 18.76 112 −185
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.00 104 +6
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.35 32 +23
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.30 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.41 4 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.56 3 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.54 2 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.58 1 New
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.61 58 +40
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.43 57 −41
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 19.14 53 −58
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.26 18 +18
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.20 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.42 3 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.37 1 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.54 1 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.52 1 New
Aosta Valley Various [b] 1 0
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Election results maps for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right). The colours correspond to the party list winning the most votes in each constituency.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Proposal B[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (C· 315 seats in the Senate (S)
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Luigi Di Maio Matteo Salvini Matteo Renzi
Party Five Star Movement League Democratic Party
Alliance None Centre-right Centre-left
Leader since 23 September 2017 15 December 2013 15 December 2013[c]
Leader's seat Acerra (C) Lazio (S)[d] Florence (S)
Seats won 227 (C· 112 (S) 125 (C· 58 (S) 112 (C· 53 (S)
Seat change Increase114 (C· Increase58 (S) Increase109 (C· Increase39 (S) Decrease80 (C· Decrease57 (S)
Popular vote 10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
5,698,687 (C)
5,321,537 (S)
6,161,896 (C)
5,783,360 (S)
Percentage 32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
17.4% (C)
17.6% (S)
18.8% (C)
19.1% (S)
Swing Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)
Increase13.3 pp (C)
Increase13.3 pp (S)
Decrease6.6 pp (C)
Decrease8.3 pp (S)

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Silvio Berlusconi Giorgia Meloni Pietro Grasso
Party Forza Italia Brothers of Italy Free and Equal
Alliance Centre-right Centre-right None
Leader since 18 January 1994 8 March 2014 3 December 2017
Leader's seat Did not run Latina (C) Sicily (S)[e]
Seats won 104 (C· 57 (S) 32 (C· 18 (S) 14 (C· 4 (S)
Seat change Increase1 (C· Decrease41 (S) Increase25 (C· Increase18 (S) New party
Popular vote 4,596,956 (C)
4,358,004 (S)
1,429,550 (C)
1,286,606 (S)
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 14.0% (C)
14.4% (S)
4.4% (C)
4.3% (S)
3.4% (C)
3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease7.6 pp (C)
Decrease7.9 pp (S)
Increase2.5 pp (C)
Increase2.4 pp (S)
New party
Chamber of Deputies (by coalition)
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Centre-right Salvini, Berlusconi & Meloni 37.00 265 +140
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Centre-left Matteo Renzi 22.85 122 −223
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate of the Republic (by coalition)
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Centre-right Salvini, Berlusconi & Meloni 37.00 137 +20
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Centre-left Matteo Renzi 22.85 60 −63
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
Aosta Valley Albert Lanièce[f] [b] 1 0
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Only running in abroad constituencies.
  2. ^ a b Only running in Aosta Valley.
  3. ^ Renzi has been the leader of the Democratic Party since 15 December 2013. He resigned after the failed 2016 constitutional referendum, and he won the Democratic Party leadership for a second time on 30 April 2017.
  4. ^ Salvini ran as capolista (list leader) for the League in five constituencies, namely Calabria 1, Lazio 1, Lombardy 4, Liguria 1 and Sicily 2.[1] He was originally elected in the Calabria 1 constituency. On 31 July 2019 the electoral commission of the Senate finally ruled for assigning Salvini's contested seat to Forza Italia; Salvini then took the Lazio 1 seat in substitution of the League senator Papaevangeliu.[2][3]
  5. ^ Grasso ran in the single-member constituency of Palermo but he was defeated. He was then elected in a closed list proportional representation system in Sicily 1 constituency.
  6. ^ As the candidate for the single-member constituency of Aosta Valley.

Proposal C[edit]

2018 Italian general election
Italy
← 2013 4 March 2018

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Chamber of Deputies
Turnout72.9% (Decrease 2.3 pp)
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Centre-right coalition (265 seats)
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.35 125 +107
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.00 104 +6
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.35 32 +23
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.30 4 New
Five Star Movement (227 seats)
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Centre-right coalition (122 seats)
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 18.76 112 −185
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.41 4 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.56 3 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.54 2 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.58 1 New
Other parties (16 seats)
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
Turnout73.0% (Decrease 2.1 pp)
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Centre-right coalition (265 seats)
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.61 58 +40
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.43 57 −41
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.26 18 +18
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.20 4 New
Five Star Movement (112 seats)
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Centre-left coalition (122 seats)
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 19.14 53 −58
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.42 3 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.37 1 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.54 1 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.52 1 New
Other parties (7 seats)
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
Aosta Valley Several [b] 1 0
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Election results maps for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right). On the left, the color identifies the coalition which received the most votes in each province. On the right, the color identifies the coalition which won the most seats in respect to each Region. Blue for the Centre-right coalition, Yellow for the Five Star Movement, and Red for the Centre-left coalition.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent
  1. ^ a b c d Only running in abroad constituencies.
  2. ^ Only running in Aosta Valley.

Proposal D[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (C· 315 seats in the Senate (S)
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease 2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease 2.1 pp)
 
Meloni Salvini Berlusconi.jpg
Luigi Di Maio Official.jpg
Leader Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi & Giorgia Meloni Luigi Di Maio
Alliance Centre-right Five Star Movement
Seats won 265 (C· 137 (S) 227 (C· 112 (S)
Seat change Increase 138 (C· Increase 20 (S) Increase 114 (C· Increase 58 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C· 37.5% (S) 32.7% (C· 32.2% (S)
Swing Increase 7.8 pp (C· Increase 6.8 pp (S) Increase 7.1 pp (C· Increase 8.4 pp (S)

 
Matteo Renzi Lingotto 2.jpg
Pietro Grasso (3405813464).jpg
Leader Matteo Renzi Pietro Grasso
Alliance Centre-left Free and Equal
Seats won 122 C · 60 S 14 (C· 4 (S)
Seat change Decrease 227 C · Decrease 65 S New
Popular vote 7,506,723 C
6,947,199 S
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 22.9% C · 23.0% S 3.4% (C· 3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease 6.7 pp C · Decrease 8.6 pp S New
Chamber of Deputies
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.35 125 +107
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 18.76 112 −185
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.00 104 +6
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.35 32 +23
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.30 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.41 4 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.56 3 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.54 2 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.58 1 New
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.61 58 +40
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.43 57 −41
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 19.14 53 −58
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.26 18 +18
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.20 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.42 3 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.37 1 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.54 1 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.52 1 New
Aosta Valley Various [b] 1 0
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Proposal E[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
 
MatteoSalvini2018 (cropped).jpg
Luigi Di Maio 2018 camera.jpg
MatteoRenzi2018 (cropped).jpg
Leader Matteo Salvini Luigi Di Maio Matteo Renzi
Alliance Centre-right Five Star Movement Centre-left
Leader since PM candidate after the election[c] 23 September 2017 7 May 2017[e]
Leader's seat Lazio (S)[d] Acerra (C)[7] Florence (S)[8]
Seats won 265 (C· 137 (S) 227 (C· 112 (S) 122 (C· 60 (S)
Seat change Increase138 (C· Increase20 (S) Increase114 (C· Increase58 (S) Decrease227 (C· Decrease65 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
Swing Increase7.8 pp (C)
Increase6.8 pp (S)
Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)
Decrease6.7 pp (C)
Decrease8.6 pp (S)

Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).
Chamber of Deputies
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.35 125 +107
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 18.76 112 −185
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.00 104 +6
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.35 32 +23
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.30 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.41 4 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.56 3 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.54 2 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.58 1 New
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.61 58 +40
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.43 57 −41
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 19.14 53 −58
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.26 18 +18
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.20 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.42 3 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.37 1 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.54 1 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.52 1 New
Aosta Valley Various [b] 1 0
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Proposal F[edit]

Four parties (I)[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
 
Leader Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi & Giorgia Meloni Luigi Di Maio
Alliance Centre-right[f] Five Star Movement
Leader since Salvini: 15 December 2013
Berlusconi: 18 January 1994
Meloni: 8 March 2014
23 September 2017
Leader's seat Salvini: Lazio (S)[g]
Berlusconi: Did not run[h]
Meloni: Latina (C)
Acerra (C)[12]
Seats won 265 (C) / 137 (S) 227 (C) / 112 (S)
Seat change Increase138 (C) / Increase20 (S) Increase114 (C) / Increase58 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
Swing Increase7.8 pp (C)
Increase6.8 pp (S)
Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)

 
Leader Matteo Renzi Pietro Grasso
Alliance Centre-left Free and Equal
Leader since 7 May 2017[i] 3 December 2017
Leader's seat Florence (S)[13] Sicily (S)[j]
Seats won 122 (C) / 60 (S) 14 (C) / 4 (S)
Seat change Decrease227 (C) / Decrease65 (S) New party
Popular vote 7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
3.4% (C)
3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease6.7 pp (C)
Decrease8.6 pp (S)
New party

Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).

Prime Minister before election

Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party

Prime Minister after the election

Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Four parties (II)[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi & Giorgia Meloni Luigi Di Maio
Party Five Star Movement
Alliance Centre-right coalition[k] [[None|None]]
Leader since Salvini: 15 December 2013
Berlusconi: 18 January 1994
Meloni: 8 March 2014
23 September 2017
Leader's seat Salvini: Lazio (S)[l]
Berlusconi: Did not run[m]
Meloni: Latina (C)
Acerra (C)[17]
Seats won 265 (C) / 137 (S) 227 (C) / 112 (S)
Seat change Increase138 (C) / Increase20 (S) Increase114 (C) / Increase58 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
Swing Increase7.8 pp (C)
Increase6.8 pp (S)
Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Matteo Renzi Pietro Grasso
Party Free and Equal
Alliance Centre-left coalition [[None|None]]
Leader since 7 May 2017[n] 3 December 2017
Leader's seat Florence (S)[18] Sicily (S)[o]
Seats won 122 (C) / 60 (S) 14 (C) / 4 (S)
Seat change Decrease227 (C) / Decrease65 (S) New party
Popular vote 7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
3.4% (C)
3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease6.7 pp (C)
Decrease8.6 pp (S)
New party

Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).

Prime Minister before election

Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party

Prime Minister after the election

Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Four parties (III)[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
 
Leader Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi & Giorgia Meloni[p] Luigi Di Maio
Alliance Centre-right Five Star Movement
Leader since Salvini: 15 December 2013
Berlusconi: 18 January 1994
Meloni: 8 March 2014
23 September 2017
Leader's seat Salvini: Lazio (S)[q]
Berlusconi: Did not run[r]
Meloni: Latina (C)
Acerra (C)[22]
Seats won 265 (C) / 137 (S) 227 (C) / 112 (S)
Seat change Increase138 (C) / Increase20 (S) Increase114 (C) / Increase58 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
Swing Increase7.8 pp (C)
Increase6.8 pp (S)
Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)

 
Leader Matteo Renzi Pietro Grasso
Alliance Centre-left Free and Equal
Leader since 7 May 2017[s] 3 December 2017
Leader's seat Florence (S)[23] Sicily (S)[t]
Seats won 122 (C) / 60 (S) 14 (C) / 4 (S)
Seat change Decrease227 (C) / Decrease65 (S) New party
Popular vote 7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
3.4% (C)
3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease6.7 pp (C)
Decrease8.6 pp (S)
New party

Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).

Prime Minister before election

Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party

Prime Minister after the election

Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Four parties (V)[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi & Giorgia Meloni Luigi Di Maio
Party Five Star Movement
Alliance Centre-right[u] [[None|None]]
Leader since Salvini: 15 December 2013
Berlusconi: 18 January 1994
Meloni: 8 March 2014
23 September 2017
Leader's seat Salvini: Lazio (S)[v]
Berlusconi: Did not run[w]
Meloni: Latina (C)
Acerra (C)[27]
Seats won 265 (C) / 137 (S) 227 (C) / 112 (S)
Seat change Increase138 (C) / Increase20 (S) Increase114 (C) / Increase58 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
Swing Increase7.8 pp (C)
Increase6.8 pp (S)
Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Matteo Renzi Pietro Grasso
Party Free and Equal
Alliance Centre-left [[None|None]]
Leader since 7 May 2017[x] 3 December 2017
Leader's seat Florence (S)[28] Sicily (S)[y]
Seats won 122 (C) / 60 (S) 14 (C) / 4 (S)
Seat change Decrease227 (C) / Decrease65 (S) New party
Popular vote 7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
3.4% (C)
3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease6.7 pp (C)
Decrease8.6 pp (S)
New party
Chamber of Deputies
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.35 125 +107
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 18.76 112 −185
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.00 104 +6
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.35 32 +23
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.30 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.41 4 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.56 3 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.54 2 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.58 1 New
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.61 58 +40
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.43 57 −41
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 19.14 53 −58
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.26 18 +18
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.20 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.42 3 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.37 1 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.54 1 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.52 1 New
Aosta Valley Various [b] 1 0
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Four parties (VI)[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi & Giorgia Meloni Luigi Di Maio
Party Five Star Movement
Alliance Centre-right coalition[z] [[None|None]]
Seats won 265 (C) / 137 (S) 227 (C) / 112 (S)
Seat change Increase138 (C) / Increase20 (S) Increase114 (C) / Increase58 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
Swing Increase7.8 pp (C)
Increase6.8 pp (S)
Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Matteo Renzi
Party Free and Equal
Alliance Centre-left coalition [[None|None]]
Leader since 3 December 2017
Seats won 122 (C) / 60 (S) 14 (C) / 4 (S)
Seat change Decrease227 (C) / Decrease65 (S) New party
Popular vote 7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
3.4% (C)
3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease6.7 pp (C)
Decrease8.6 pp (S)
New party
Chamber of Deputies
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 18.76 112 −185
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.35 125 +107
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.00 104 +6
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.35 32 +23
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 19.14 53 −58
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.61 58 +40
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.43 57 −41
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.26 18 +18
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Four parties (VII)[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi & Giorgia Meloni[aa] Luigi Di Maio
Party Five Star Movement
Alliance Centre-right None
Seats won 265 (C) / 137 (S) 227 (C) / 112 (S)
Seat change Increase138 (C) / Increase20 (S) Increase114 (C) / Increase58 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
Swing Increase7.8 pp (C)
Increase6.8 pp (S)
Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Matteo Renzi Pietro Grasso
Party Free and Equal
Alliance Centre-left None
Seats won 122 (C) / 60 (S) 14 (C) / 4 (S)
Seat change Decrease227 (C) / Decrease65 (S) New party
Popular vote 7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
3.4% (C)
3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease6.7 pp (C)
Decrease8.6 pp (S)
New party
Chamber of Deputies
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.35 125 +107
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 18.76 112 −185
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.00 104 +6
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.35 32 +23
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.30 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.41 4 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.56 3 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.54 2 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.58 1 New
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.61 58 +40
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.43 57 −41
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 19.14 53 −58
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.26 18 +18
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.20 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.42 3 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.37 1 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.54 1 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.52 1 New
Aosta Valley Albert Lanièce[ab] [b] 1 0
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent

Three parties[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies · 315 seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi & Giorgia Meloni[ac] Luigi Di Maio Matteo Renzi
Party Five Star Movement
Alliance Centre-right None Centre-left
Seats won 265 (C) / 137 (S) 227 (C) / 112 (S) 122 (C) / 60 (S)
Seat change Increase138 (C) / Increase20 (S) Increase114 (C) / Increase58 (S) Decrease227 (C) / Decrease65 (S)
Popular vote 12,152,345 (C)
11,327,549 (S)
10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
7,506,723 (C)
6,947,199 (S)
Percentage 37.0% (C)
37.5% (S)
32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
22.9% (C)
23.0% (S)
Swing Increase7.8 pp (C)
Increase6.8 pp (S)
Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)
Decrease6.7 pp (C)
Decrease8.6 pp (S)
Chamber of Deputies
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.68 227 +118
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.35 125 +107
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 18.76 112 −185
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.00 104 +6
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.35 32 +23
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.38 14 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.30 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.41 4 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.56 3 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.54 2 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.58 1 New
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Five Star Movement Luigi Di Maio 32.22 112 +58
Lega Nord Matteo Salvini 17.61 58 +40
Forza Italia Silvio Berlusconi 14.43 57 −41
Democratic Party Matteo Renzi 19.14 53 −58
Brothers of Italy Giorgia Meloni 4.26 18 +18
Free and Equal Pietro Grasso 3.28 4 New
Us with Italy Raffaele Fitto 1.20 4 New
SVP Philipp Achammer 0.42 3 −1
More Europe Emma Bonino 2.37 1 New
Together Giulio Santagata 0.54 1 New
Popular Civic List Beatrice Lorenzin 0.52 1 New
Aosta Valley Albert Lanièce[ad] [b] 1 0
MAIE Ricardo Merlo [a] 1 −1
South American Union Italian Emigrants Eugenio Sangregorio [a] 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Election results maps by constituencies for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right).
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after the election
Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party
Giuseppe Conte
Independent

B[edit]

2018 Italian general election

← 2013 4 March 2018 Next →

All 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (C· 315 seats in the Senate (S)
Opinion polls
Registered46,505,350 (C· 42,780,033 (S)
Turnout33,923,321 (C· 72.9% (Decrease2.3 pp)
31,231,814 (S· 73.0% (Decrease2.1 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Luigi Di Maio Matteo Salvini Matteo Renzi
Party Five Star Movement League Democratic Party
Alliance None Centre-right Centre-left
Leader since 23 September 2017 15 December 2013 15 December 2013[af]
Leader's seat Acerra (C) Lazio (S)[ae] Florence (S)
Seats won 227 (C· 112 (S) 125 (C· 58 (S) 112 (C· 53 (S)
Seat change Increase114 (C· Increase58 (S) Increase109 (C· Increase39 (S) Decrease80 (C· Decrease57 (S)
Popular vote 10,732,066 (C)
9,733,928 (S)
5,698,687 (C)
5,321,537 (S)
6,161,896 (C)
5,783,360 (S)
Percentage 32.7% (C)
32.2% (S)
17.4% (C)
17.6% (S)
18.8% (C)
19.1% (S)
Swing Increase7.1 pp (C)
Increase8.4 pp (S)
Increase13.3 pp (C)
Increase13.3 pp (S)
Decrease6.6 pp (C)
Decrease8.3 pp (S)

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Silvio Berlusconi Giorgia Meloni Pietro Grasso
Party Forza Italia Brothers of Italy Free and Equal
Alliance Centre-right Centre-right None
Leader since 18 January 1994 8 March 2014 3 December 2017
Leader's seat Did not run Latina (C) Sicily (S)[ag]
Seats won 104 (C· 57 (S) 32 (C· 18 (S) 14 (C· 4 (S)
Seat change Increase1 (C· Decrease41 (S) Increase25 (C· Increase18 (S) New party
Popular vote 4,596,956 (C)
4,358,004 (S)
1,429,550 (C)
1,286,606 (S)
1,114,799 (C)
991,159 (S)
Percentage 14.0% (C)
14.4% (S)
4.4% (C)
4.3% (S)
3.4% (C)
3.3% (S)
Swing Decrease7.6 pp (C)
Decrease7.9 pp (S)
Increase2.5 pp (C)
Increase2.4 pp (S)
New party

Election results maps for the Chamber of Deputies (on the left) and for the Senate (on the right). The colours correspond to the party list winning the most votes in each constituency.

Prime Minister before election

Paolo Gentiloni
Democratic Party

Prime Minister after the election

Giuseppe Conte
Independent

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Only running in abroad constituencies.
  2. ^ a b c d e Only running in Aosta Valley.
  3. ^ The centre-right did not run with a single coalition leader. On the basis of an agreement between the leaders of the centre-right coalition parties (Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi and Giorgia Meloni), in case of electoral victory, the party that had received the most votes could have proposed its own candidate for Prime Minister on behalf of the entire coalition during the consultations with the President of the Republic. Salvini, as leader of the most voted party within the coalition (the League), was therefore the Prime Minister candidate of the centre-right.
  4. ^ Salvini ran as capolista (list leader) for the League in five constituencies, namely Calabria 1, Lazio 1, Lombardy 4, Liguria 1 and Sicily 2.[4] He was originally elected in the Calabria 1 constituency. On 31 July 2019 the electoral commission of the Senate finally ruled for assigning Salvini's contested seat to Forza Italia; Salvini then took the Lazio 1 seat in substitution of the League senator Papaevangeliu.[5][6]
  5. ^ Renzi was the leader of the Democratic Party since 15 December 2013. However, Renzi resigned after the failed 2016 constitutional referendum only to re-win the Democratic Party leadership on 30 April 2017.
  6. ^ The centre-right did not run with a single coalition leader. On the basis of an agreement between the leaders of the main parties of the coalition (Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi and Giorgia Meloni), in case of electoral victory, the party with more votes could have proposed its own candidate for Prime Minister on behalf of the entire coalition during the consultations with the President of the Republic. Salvini, as leader of the most voted party within the coalition (the League), was therefore the Prime Minister candidate of the centre-right.
  7. ^ Salvini ran as capolista (list leader) for the League in five constituencies, namely Calabria 1, Lazio 1, Lombardy 4, Liguria 1 and Sicily 2.[9] He was originally elected in the Calabria 1 constituency. On 31 July 2019 the electoral commission of the Senate finally ruled for assigning Salvini's contested seat to Forza Italia; Salvini then took the Lazio 1 seat in substitution of the League senator Papaevangeliu.[10][11]
  8. ^ In 2013 Berlusconi had been sentenced to a gross imprisonment for four years for tax fraud, barring him from serving in any legislative office for six years.
  9. ^ Renzi was the leader of the Democratic Party since 15 December 2013. However, Renzi resigned after the failed 2016 constitutional referendum only to re-win the Democratic Party leadership on 30 April 2017.
  10. ^ Grasso ran in the single-member constituency of Palermo but he was defeated. He was then elected in a closed list proportional representation system in Sicily 1 constituency.
  11. ^ The centre-right did not run with a single coalition leader. On the basis of an agreement between the leaders of the main parties of the coalition (Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi and Giorgia Meloni), in case of electoral victory, the party with more votes could have proposed its own candidate for Prime Minister on behalf of the entire coalition during the consultations with the President of the Republic. Salvini, as leader of the most voted party within the coalition (the League), was therefore the Prime Minister candidate of the centre-right.
  12. ^ Salvini ran as capolista (list leader) for the League in five constituencies, namely Calabria 1, Lazio 1, Lombardy 4, Liguria 1 and Sicily 2.[14] He was originally elected in the Calabria 1 constituency. On 31 July 2019 the electoral commission of the Senate finally ruled for assigning Salvini's contested seat to Forza Italia; Salvini then took the Lazio 1 seat in substitution of the League senator Papaevangeliu.[15][16]
  13. ^ In 2013 Berlusconi had been sentenced to a gross imprisonment for four years for tax fraud, barring him from serving in any legislative office for six years.
  14. ^ Renzi was the leader of the Democratic Party since 15 December 2013. However, Renzi resigned after the failed 2016 constitutional referendum only to re-win the Democratic Party leadership on 30 April 2017.
  15. ^ Grasso ran in the single-member constituency of Palermo but he was defeated. He was then elected in a closed list proportional representation system in Sicily 1 constituency.
  16. ^ The centre-right did not run with a single coalition leader. On the basis of an agreement between the leaders of the main centre-right coalition parties (Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi and Giorgia Meloni), in case of electoral victory, the party that had received the most votes could have proposed its own candidate for Prime Minister on behalf of the entire coalition during the consultations with the President of the Republic. Salvini, as leader of the most voted party within the coalition (the League), was therefore the Prime Minister candidate of the centre-right.
  17. ^ Salvini ran as capolista (list leader) for the League in five constituencies, namely Calabria 1, Lazio 1, Lombardy 4, Liguria 1 and Sicily 2.[19] He was originally elected in the Calabria 1 constituency. On 31 July 2019 the electoral commission of the Senate finally ruled for assigning Salvini's contested seat to Forza Italia; Salvini then took the Lazio 1 seat in substitution of the League senator Papaevangeliu.[20][21]
  18. ^ In 2013 Berlusconi had been sentenced to a gross imprisonment for four years for tax fraud, barring him from serving in any legislative office for six years.
  19. ^ Renzi was the leader of the Democratic Party since 15 December 2013. However, Renzi resigned after the failed 2016 constitutional referendum only to re-win the Democratic Party leadership on 30 April 2017.
  20. ^ Grasso ran in the single-member constituency of Palermo but he was defeated. He was then elected in a closed list proportional representation system in Sicily 1 constituency.
  21. ^ The centre-right did not run with a single coalition leader. On the basis of an agreement between the leaders of the main parties of the coalition (Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi and Giorgia Meloni), in case of electoral victory, the party with more votes could have proposed its own candidate for Prime Minister on behalf of the entire coalition during the consultations with the President of the Republic. Salvini, as leader of the most voted party within the coalition (the League), was therefore the Prime Minister candidate of the centre-right.
  22. ^ Salvini ran as capolista (list leader) for the League in five constituencies, namely Calabria 1, Lazio 1, Lombardy 4, Liguria 1 and Sicily 2.[24] He was originally elected in the Calabria 1 constituency. On 31 July 2019 the electoral commission of the Senate finally ruled for assigning Salvini's contested seat to Forza Italia; Salvini then took the Lazio 1 seat in substitution of the League senator Papaevangeliu.[25][26]
  23. ^ In 2013 Berlusconi had been sentenced to a gross imprisonment for four years for tax fraud, barring him from serving in any legislative office for six years.
  24. ^ Renzi was the leader of the Democratic Party since 15 December 2013. However, Renzi resigned after the failed 2016 constitutional referendum only to re-win the Democratic Party leadership on 30 April 2017.
  25. ^ Grasso ran in the single-member constituency of Palermo but he was defeated. He was then elected in a closed list proportional representation system in Sicily 1 constituency.
  26. ^ The centre-right did not run with a single coalition leader. On the basis of an agreement between the leaders of the main parties of the coalition (Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi and Giorgia Meloni), in case of electoral victory, the party with more votes could have proposed its own candidate for Prime Minister on behalf of the entire coalition during the consultations with the President of the Republic. Salvini, as leader of the most voted party within the coalition (the League), was therefore the Prime Minister candidate of the centre-right.
  27. ^ The centre-right did not run with a single coalition leader. On the basis of an agreement between the leaders of the main parties of the coalition (Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi and Giorgia Meloni), in case of electoral victory, the party with more votes could have proposed its own candidate for Prime Minister on behalf of the entire coalition during the consultations with the President of the Republic. Salvini, as leader of the most voted party within the coalition (the League), was therefore the Prime Minister candidate of the centre-right.
  28. ^ As the candidate for the single-member constituency of Aosta Valley.
  29. ^ The centre-right did not run with a single coalition leader. On the basis of an agreement between the leaders of the main parties of the coalition (Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi and Giorgia Meloni), in case of electoral victory, the party with more votes could have proposed its own candidate for Prime Minister on behalf of the entire coalition during the consultations with the President of the Republic. Salvini, as leader of the most voted party within the coalition (the League), was therefore the Prime Minister candidate of the centre-right.
  30. ^ As the candidate for the single-member constituency of Aosta Valley.
  31. ^ Salvini ran as capolista (list leader) for the League in five constituencies, namely Calabria 1, Lazio 1, Lombardy 4, Liguria 1 and Sicily 2.[29] He was originally elected in the Calabria 1 constituency. On 31 July 2019 the electoral commission of the Senate finally ruled for assigning Salvini's contested seat to Forza Italia; Salvini then took the Lazio 1 seat in substitution of the League senator Papaevangeliu.[30][31]
  32. ^ Renzi has been the leader of the Democratic Party since 15 December 2013. He resigned after the failed 2016 constitutional referendum, and he won the Democratic Party leadership for a second time on 30 April 2017.
  33. ^ Grasso ran in the single-member constituency of Palermo but he was defeated. He was then elected in a closed list proportional representation system in Sicily 1 constituency.

Other proposals[edit]

Proposal 1 (Ritchie92)[edit]

Template:Infobox election

Major changes
  1. embed Senate and Chamber results by party (not by coalition)
    1. question: the percentage for the 2018 is the one relative to the proportional part, is that good enough? or remove the percentage results altogether?
    2. add maps for party results in the Chamber or Senate at the end?
    3. how many parties to include? from template it looks like all parties who got seats have to be included (so also Italians-abroad parties)
  2. add swing (in percentage points)
  3. no bold result for winner, since this is not a presidential election (also, see most recent elections in other countries, e.g. 2021 Canadian federal election and 2021 German federal election)
  4. add PM photos before/after (see 2021 Dutch general election for example)
Medium/minor changes
  1. middle dot "Template:Dot" instead of "/" to separate C and S results in coalitions infobox (unless the lines are too long, then use new line) – smoother to the eye (and more orderly in my opinion)
  2. add number of registered voters – interesting piece of information
  3. add turnout for Senate – not clear why we show only the Chamber turnout
  4. use Template:Abbr Template:Abbr instead of S (with parentheses or not?) – reason: too many blue links, and very heavy code
  5. remove direct sources and references (details should all be explained in text, not in the infobox)
  6. Centre-right coalition --> Centre-right, same for Centre-left

Template:Clear

Proposal 2 (Number 57)[edit]

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Proposal 3 (Nick.mon)[edit]

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Proposal 4 (Scia Della Cometa)[edit]

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Proposal 4-bis[edit]

Template:Ping do you have in mind something like this? -- Nick.mon (talk) 21:33, 12 October 2021 (UTC)

More or less yes, however I replaced it with the table I was working on. -- Scia Della Cometa (talk) 22:03, 12 October 2021 (UTC)
However, I like Nick.mon's idea of inserting the tables in the drop-down menu. -- Scia Della Cometa (talk) 22:10, 12 October 2021 (UTC)

Template:Infobox election Template:Notelist Template:-

Template:Clear

Proposal 4-ter[edit]

Template:Infobox election

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Proposal 4-quater[edit]

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References[edit]

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Notes[edit]

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