The parties of Premier Giorgia
Meloni's ruling coalition on Tuesday were close to finding
common ground on a new election law, having apparently overcome
disagreements on whether to enable voters to express preferences
about which candidates on a party's list they want to represent
them.
The opposition is crying foul about the ruling majority's drive
to overhaul the system, saying they are changing it because they
fear losing the general election set to take place next year and
want to minimize the chances of this happening.
The governing coalition has presented a bill that will see the
current system, a mix of first-past-the-post and proportional
representation, replaced with a proportional-representation
system with bonus seats for a coalition that obtains at least
42% of the vote to ensure it has a working majority in
parliament.
The coalition that comes first and crosses the threshold will
get 70 extra seats in the Lower House and 35 in the Senate.
If no coalition reaches the 42% threshold, or the votes for the
Lower House and the Senate produce different results, a purely
proportional system will be used.
On Monday Meloni's right-wing Brothers of Italy (FdI) presented
an amendment with two small centrist parties, NM and UDC, to
give voters the option to express preferences for up to three
candidates on a list.
Deputy Premier and Transport Minister Matteo Salvini's
right-wing League party said Tuesday that it would vote in
favour of the amendment.
The other major partner in the coalition, Deputy Premier and
Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani's centre-right post Berlusconi
Forza Italia party, is also likely to back the amendment,
sources said.
Ex-premier Giuseppe Conte's opposition 5-Star Movement (M5S) has
blasted the FdI-NM-UDC amendment, saying it would give voters
"fake preferences" as the head of the ticket would be "blocked".
The centre-left Democratic Party (PD) is set to request that
amendments to the bill, including on the preferences, be put to
secret ballots.
This would make it easier for lawmakers belonging to the ruling
coalition to buck the line of their parties if they wanted to
without having to face consequences.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA


