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Italy's Meloni Proposes Electoral Reform to Boost Re-election Chances
The proposed reform would grant a seat bonus to coalitions winning over 40% of votes, potentially increasing Meloni's chances of re-election despite recent government setbacks.
- On Tuesday, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni introduced a new electoral reform in parliament, seeking to revive her government's fortunes following a damaging justice reform referendum defeat last week.
- Reeling from her first major drubbing since taking office in 2022, Meloni aims to galvanize her coalition government with a new polls system that could boost her re-election chances next year.
- The reform switches Italy to a fully proportional system, offering a seat bonus to any coalition winning more than 40 percent of the vote, though simulations show the center-left could gain those bonus seats if the right bloc loses the far-right National Future party.
- Brothers party members remain divided over the law, with commentator Ilario Lombardo writing in the Stampa daily Monday that they fear the reform ignores "potentially irreversible decline" amid global uncertainty.
- Political scientist Giovanni Orsina of Luiss University told AFP that Meloni is showing "undeniable signs of weakness," noting her closeness to President Donald Trump is viewed as an increasing liability.
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Put in difficulty by the victory of the "no" in the referendum on its judicial reform, the Italian Prime Minister would like to change the method of voting for the legislative elections.
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Total News Sources12
Leaning Left3Leaning Right0Center3Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Left, 50% Center
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources are Center
50% Center
L 50%
C 50%
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