2010 Piedmontese regional election explained

Election Name:2010 Piedmentese regional election
Country:Piedmont
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2005 Piedmontese regional election
Previous Year:2005
Next Election:2014 Piedmontese regional election
Next Year:2014
Seats For Election:All 60 seats to the Regional Council of Piedmont
Election Date:28–29 March 2010
Turnout:64.33% (7.04%)
Leader1:Roberto Cota
Party1:Northern League
Color1:0A6BE1
Alliance1:Centre-right coalition (Italy)
Last Election1:25 seats, 47.0%
Seats1:36
Seat Change1:11
Popular Vote1:1,043,318
Percentage1:47.3%
Swing1:0.3%
Leader2:Mercedes Bresso
Party2:Democratic Party (Italy)
Alliance2:Centre-left coalition (Italy)
Color2:EF3E3E
Last Election2:38 seats, 50.9%
Seats2:22
Seat Change2:16
Popular Vote2:1,033,946
Percentage2:46.9%
Swing2:4.0%
President
Posttitle:President-elect
Before Election:Mercedes Bresso
Before Party:PD
After Election:Roberto Cota
After Party:LN

The 2010 Piedmontese regional election took place on 28–29 March 2010 as part of Italy's round of regional elections. Mercedes Bresso of the centre-left Democratic Party, the incumbent president of the region, lost her seat to Roberto Cota, leader of the Northern League Piedmont (Lega Piemonte) and floor leader of Lega Nord (Northern League) in the Italian Chamber of Deputies, who was backed also by The People of Freedom.[1]

Cota's lead of Bresso was of only 0.4%, in one of the region's narrowest elections ever. The League thus secured a second region, after having conquered the presidency of Veneto with Luca Zaia with a much more convincing margin.

Electoral system

Regional elections in Piedmont were ruled by the Tatarella law, which was approved in 1995 and provided for a mixed electoral system. Four fifths of the regional councilors were elected in provincial constituencies by proportional representation, using the largest remainder method with a Droop quota and open lists, while the residual votes and the unassigned seats were grouped into a single regional constituency, where the whole ratios and the highest remainders were divided with the Hare quota among the provincial party lists; one fifth of the council seats instead was reserved for regional lists and assigned with a majoritarian representation system, in which the leader of the regional list that scored the highest number of votes was elected to the presidency of the region, while the other candidates were elected regional councilors.

A threshold of 3% had been established for the provincial lists, which could still have entered the regional council if the regional list to which they were connected had scored at least 5% of valid votes. The panachage was also allowed; the voter can indicate a candidate for the presidency but prefer a provincial list connected to another candidate.

Background

Bresso was one of the last bulwarks of the country's centre-left coalition in Central Italy and thus all Democratic Party members endorsed her in a key test of the coalition's strength after two years in opposition in Rome. For his part, Cota's choice was a little bit surprising as Piedmont is not really a stronghold for his party, which is much stronger in Veneto and Lombardy. The day after his bid was announced, Cota explained that it is time to rewrite the history of Italian unification, that was led by the Kingdom of Sardinia under the House of Savoy. Cota underlined that Piedmont was once an independent state and told that even Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour, did not intend to unify the whole Italian Peninsula and later favoured a federal reform of the new Kingdom of Italy.

Cota, who is a republican and has no nostalgia of the House of Savoy, said his message would do well in Piedmont and that he would overcome the weakness of Lega Piemonte that usually gets far fewer votes than Liga Veneta in Veneto and Lega Lombarda in Lombardy. In Cota's view, most of his support would come from industrial workers, including those of Southern Italy descent, and Catholics embarrassed by Bresso's secularism.[2] The Union of the Centre, whose main aim in the election was to fight back the Northern League, chose to support Bresso, turning down the chance of running its own candidate, the most likely being Michele Vietti.[3] Most Catholic voters disagreed.

Parties and candidates

Political party or allianceConstituent listsPrevious resultCandidate
Votes (%)Seats
Centre-left coalition30.417Mercedes Bresso
9.05
4.62
Together for Bresso2.91
Federation of the Greens2.81
Italian Socialist PartyUnited Socialists2.41
1.51
Others
Centre-right coalition31.916Roberto Cota
Northern League Piedmont8.54
1.21
Consumers 1.11
0.6
Others
Five Star MovementDavide Bono

Results

CandidatesVotes%SeatsPartiesVotes%Seats
Roberto Cota1,043,31847.3312
The People of Freedom474,43125.0513
Northern League Piedmont317,06516.749
Greens Greens33,4111.761
Pensioners' Party27,7971.471
The Right12,5810.66
To the Centre with Scanderebech12,1540.64
Alliance of the CentreChristian Democracy5,7040.30
New Italian Socialist Party3,9470.21
Consumers8,8260.15
Total889,91646.9824
Mercedes Bresso1,033,94646.911
Democratic Party439,66323.2112
Italy of Values130,6496.903
Union of the Centre74,4123.932
Together for Bresso61,4763.251
Moderates58,0103.061
Federation of the Left50,1912.651
Left Ecology Freedom27,1981.441
Federation of the Greens14,5750.77
Italian Socialist PartyUnited Socialists14,0770.74
Bonino-Pannella List13,5720.72
Pensioners and Disabled for Bresso12,5640.66
PiedmontYes – Populars – Autonomous Region4,1500.22
Total900,53747.5521
Davide Bono90,0864.09Five Star Movement69,4483.672
Renzo Rabellino36,9991.68
List of Talking Crickets – No Euro13,1860.70
Lega Padana Piemont7,8050.41
Forza Toro3,4940.18
New Force2,1510.11
Tricolour Flame1,9980.11
UDEURChristian Democracy – Others1,6700.09
No Nuclear – No TAV1,5530.08
Alliance for Turin1,2370.07
Young People Under 301,0760.06
Total34,1701.80
Total candidates2,204,349100.0013Total parties1,894,071100.0047
Source: Ministry of the Interior – Historical Archive of Elections

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Archivio Corriere della Sera. QuestIT s.r.l.. 2 April 2016.
  2. Web site: Archivio Corriere della Sera. QuestIT s.r.l.. 2 April 2016.
  3. Web site: Udc-Bresso, affare fattoin dote entra la Sanità. 23 December 2009. LaStampa.it. 2 April 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20100219090926/http://www3.lastampa.it/torino/sezioni/politica/articolo/lstp/108332/. 19 February 2010. dead.