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Chamber of Deputies | |
Legislature: | 19th legislature (list) |
Coa Pic: | Chamber of Deputies of Italy - Logo.svg |
House Type: | Lower house |
Body: | Italian Parliament |
Session Room: | Montecitorio Aula.jpg |
Leader1 Type: | President |
Leader1: | Lorenzo Fontana |
Party1: | Lega |
Election1: | 14 October 2022 |
Leader2 Type: | Vice Presidents |
Leader2: | Fabio Rampelli (FdI) Giorgio Mulé (FI) Anna Ascani (PD) Sergio Costa (M5S) |
Election2: | 19 October 2022 |
Voting System1: | Mixed-member majoritarian representation 147 FPTP seats, 253 PR seats with 3% electoral threshold (D'Hondt method) |
Members: | 400 |
Structure1: | Chamber of Deputies current composition.svg |
Structure1 Res: | 250px |
Political Groups1: | Government (239)
Opposition (161)
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Last Election1: | 25 September 2022 |
Next Election1: | On or before 22 December 2027 |
Meeting Place: | Palazzo Montecitorio, Rome |
Website: | |
Rules: | Rules of Procedure of the Chamber of Deputies (English) |
The Chamber of Deputies (Italian: Camera dei deputati) is the lower house of the bicameral Italian Parliament, the upper house being the Senate of the Republic. The two houses together form a perfect bicameral system, meaning they perform identical functions, but do so separately. The Chamber of Deputies has 400 seats, of which 392 are elected from Italian constituencies, and 8 from Italian citizens living abroad. Deputies are styled The Honourable (Italian: Onorevole)[1] and meet at Palazzo Montecitorio.
The seat of the Chamber of Deputies is the Palazzo Montecitorio, where it has met since 1871, shortly after the capital of the Kingdom of Italy was moved to Rome at the successful conclusion of the Italian unification Risorgimento movement.
Previously, the seat of the Chamber of Deputies of the Kingdom of Italy had been briefly at the Palazzo Carignano in Turin (1861–1865) and the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence (1865–1871). Under the Fascist regime of Benito Mussolini, the Chamber of Deputies was abolished and replaced by the figurehead Chamber of Fasces and Corporations from 1939 to 1943 (during World War II).
The Chamber is composed of all members meeting in session at the Montecitorio. The assembly also has the right to attend meetings of the Government and its ministers. If required, the Government is obligated to attend the session. Conversely, the Government has the right to be heard every time it requires.
The term of office of the House (as well as the Senate) is five years, but can be extended in two cases:
See main article: Italian electoral law of 2017. The electoral system is a mixed-member majoritarian with 37% of seats allocated using first-past-the-post voting (FPTP) and 63% using proportional representation, allocated with the largest remainder method, with one round of voting.
The 400 deputies are elected in:
For Italian residents, each house members are elected by single ballots, including the constituency candidate and his supporting party lists. In each single-member constituency the deputy/senator is elected on a plurality basis, while the seats in multi-member constituencies will be allocated nationally. In order to be calculated in single-member constituency results, parties need to obtain at least 1% of the national vote. In order to receive seats in multi-member constituencies, parties need to obtain at least 3% of the national vote. Elects from multi-member constituencies will come from closed lists.
The single voting paper, containing both first-past-the-post candidates and the party lists, shows the names of the candidates to single-member constituencies and, in close conjunction with them, the symbols of the linked lists for the proportional part, each one with a list of the relative candidates.
The voter can cast his vote in three different ways:
Article 61 of the Italian Constitution maintains that elections for the Chamber of Deputies must take place within 70 days of the dissolution of the house, and that representatives must convene within 20 days of those elections.
See main article: List of presidents of the Chamber of Deputies (Italy). The President of the Chamber of Deputies performs the role of speaker of the house and is elected during the first session after the election. During this time the prerogatives of speaker are assumed by the vice president of Chamber of Deputies[2] of the previous legislature who was elected first. If two were elected simultaneously, the oldest deputy serves as president of Chamber of Deputies.
The President of Chamber of Deputies has also the role of President during the Parliament joint sessions, when the upper and lower houses have to vote together.
Lorenzo Fontana is the current president of the Chamber of Deputies.
Name | Period | Legislature | ||
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Giovanni Gronchi (DC) | 8 May 1948 – 29 April 1955 | I, II | ||
Giovanni Leone (DC) | 10 May 1955 – 21 June 1963 | II, III, IV | ||
Brunetto Bucciarelli-Ducci (DC) | 26 June 1963 – 4 June 1968 | IV | ||
Sandro Pertini (PSI) | 5 June 1968 – 4 July 1976 | V, VI | ||
Pietro Ingrao (PCI) | 5 July 1976 – 19 June 1979 | VII | ||
Nilde Iotti (PCI) | 20 June 1979 – 22 April 1992 | VIII, IX, X | ||
Oscar Luigi Scalfaro (DC) | 24 April 1992 – 25 May 1992 | XI | ||
Giorgio Napolitano (PDS) | 3 June 1992 – 14 April 1994 | |||
Irene Pivetti (LN) | 16 April 1994 – 8 May 1996 | XII | ||
Luciano Violante (PDS) | 10 May 1996 – 29 May 2001 | XIII | ||
Pier Ferdinando Casini (CCD) | 31 May 2001 – 27 April 2006 | XIV | ||
Fausto Bertinotti (PRC) | 29 April 2006 – 28 April 2008 | XV | ||
Gianfranco Fini (PdL) | 30 April 2008 – 14 March 2013 | XVI | ||
Laura Boldrini (SEL) | 16 March 2013 – 22 March 2018 | XVII | ||
Roberto Fico (M5S) | 24 March 2018 – 12 October 2022 | XVIII | ||
Lorenzo Fontana (Lega) | since 14 October 2022 | XIX |
See main article: List of members of the Italian Chamber of Deputies, 2022–. The Chamber has 400 members. They were most recently elected at the 2022 general election.
In 2019, the Italian parliament passed a constitutional law that reduces the number of the deputies from 630 to 400. The law was approved on 21 and 22 September 2020 by a referendum.[3]
Legislature XIX of Italy was the first one in which the number of Deputies was equal to 400.
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