Sardinia (Chamber of Deputies constituency) explained

Sardinia
Type:Chamber of Deputies
Electoral
Region Label:Region
Region:Sardinia
Electorate:1,368,471 (2018)[1]
Towns:Cagliari, Nuoro, Oristano, Sassari
Year:1993
Seats:17

Sardinia is one of the 29 constituencies (Italian: circoscrizioni) represented in the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of the Italian parliament.[2] The constituency currently elects 17 deputies. Its boundaries correspond to those of the Italian region of Sardinia. The electoral system uses a parallel voting system, which act as a mixed system, with 37% of seats allocated using a first-past-the-post electoral system and 61% using a proportional method, with one round of voting.[3]

The constituency was first established by the Mattarella law on 4 August 1993 and later confirmed by the Calderoli law on 21 December 2005 and by the Rosato law on 3 November 2017.

Members of the Parliament

2018–present

Single-member districts
width=35% colspan="3" Districtwidth=25% rowspan="2" Deputywidth=15% colspan="14" rowspan="2" Party
width=1% N.width=18% Namewidth=18% Map
01CagliariAndrea Mura
then Andrea Frailis[4]
Five Star Movement (Mura)
Democratic Party (Frailis)
02NuoroMara LapiaFive Star Movement
then Democratic Centre
03CarboniaPino CabrasFive Star Movement
then Alternativa
04SassariMario PerantoniFive Star Movement
05OlbiaBernardo MarinoFive Star Movement
then Italia Viva
06OristanoLuciano CadedduFive Star Movement
Multi-member districts
width=35% colspan="3" Districtwidth=20% colspan="2" rowspan="2" Partywidth=25% rowspan="2" Deputy
width=1% N.width=18% Namewidth=18% Map
01Sardinia 01M5SEmanuela Corda
M5SAndrea Vallascas
M5SLucia Scanu
PDRomina Mura
FIUgo Cappellacci
LegaGuido De Martini
FdISalvatore Deidda
02Sardinia 02M5SAlberto Manca
M5SPaola Deiana
PDGavino Manca
FIPietro Pittalis

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Circoscrizione Sardegna. 4 March 2018. Ministero dell'Interno.
  2. Web site: Conoscere la Camera – Scheda illustrativa. 4 March 2018. Camera dei Deputati.
  3. Web site: Come funziona la legge elettorale e cosa prevede. 2017. Corriere della Sera.
  4. see 2019 Italian by-elections