European Parliament election, 2009 (Italy)
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Major parties in each Province | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The European Parliament election of 2009 in Italy was held on Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 June 2009, as decided by the Italian government on 18 December 2008.[1] Italy elected 72 members of the European Parliament (MEPs).
Electoral system
The party-list proportional representation was the traditional electoral system of the Italian Republic since its foundation in 1946, so it had been adopted to elect the Italian representatives to the European Parliament too. Two levels were used: a national level to divide seats between parties, and a constituency level to distribute them between candidates. Italian regions were united in 5 constituencies, each electing a group of deputies. At national level, seats were divided between party lists using the largest remainder method with Hare quota. All seats gained by each party were automatically distributed to their local open lists and their most voted candidates.
In the run-up of the election, the Italian Parliament has introduced a national threshold of 4% in the electoral law for the European Parliament.
However, the electoral law guarantees representation for linguistic minorities. The parties which represent minorities can be connected with the major parties for the purpose of elections, combining their votes. If the party of the linguistic minority gets more than 50,000 votes, it wins a seat.
Results
The election was a victory for Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. The parties supporting the government (The People of Freedom and Lega Nord) won 38 seats, while the opposition (Democratic Party, Italy of Values and Union of the Centre) collectively elected 34 candidates.
After the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon on 1 December 2009, the seats of Italy in the European Parliament increased from 72 to 73. The additional seat was assigned to Union of the Centre (that went from 5 to 6 seats).
Party | European group | Main candidate | Votes | % | +/– | Seats | +/– | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The People of Freedom | EPP | Silvio Berlusconi | 10,797,296 | 35.26 | 1.35 | 29 / 72 |
3 | |
Democratic Party | S&D | David Sassoli | 7,999,476 | 26.12 | 4.96 | 21 / 72 |
3 | |
Lega Nord | EFD | Umberto Bossi | 3,126,181 | 10.21 | 5.25 | 9 / 72 |
5 | |
Italy of Values | ALDE | Luigi de Magistris | 2,450,643 | 8.00 | 5.86 | 7 / 72 |
5 | |
Union of the Centre | EPP | Ciriaco De Mita | 1,995,021 | 6.51 | 0.62 | 5 / 72 |
0 | |
Anticapitalist and Communist List | GUE/NGL | 1,037,862 | 3.39 | 5.09 | 0 / 72 |
7 | ||
Left and Freedom | GUE/NGL | 957,822 | 3.13 | New | 0 / 72 |
New | ||
Bonino-Pannella List | ALDE | 743,284 | 2.43 | 0.18 | 0 / 72 |
2 | ||
The Autonomy | None | 681,290 | 2.22 | New | 0 / 72 |
New | ||
Tricolour Flame | None | 246,403 | 0.80 | 0.07 | 0 / 72 |
1 | ||
Workers' Communist Party | None | 166,531 | 0.54 | New | 0 / 72 |
New | ||
New Force | None | 147,343 | 0.48 | – | 0 / 72 |
0 | ||
South Tyrolean People's Party[2] | EPP | Herbert Dorfmann | 143,509 | 0.47 | 0.02 | 1 / 72 |
0 | |
Liberal Democrats – Associative Movement Italians Abroad | None | 71,067 | 0.23 | New | 0 / 72 |
New | ||
Aosta Valley (UV - SA - FA)[3] | EPP | 32,913 | 0.11 | – | 0 / 72 |
0 | ||
Autonomy Liberty Democracy[4] | None | 27,199 | 0.09 | New | 0 / 72 |
New | ||
Valid votes | 30,390,070 | 92.79 | ||||||
Blank and Invalid votes | 2,125,164 | 7.21 | ||||||
Totals | 32,749,004 | 100.00 | — | 0 / 72 |
6 | |||
Electorate and voter turnout | 50,342,153 | 65.05 | ||||||
Source: Ministry of the Interior | ||||||||
References
- ↑ Elezioni europee e amministrative il 6 e 7 giugno 2009
- ↑ List connected with the Democratic Party
- ↑ List connected with The People of Freedom
- ↑ List connected with Italy of Values