Politics of Veneto

The Politics of Veneto, a Region of Italy takes place in a framework of a semi-presidential representative democracy, whereby the President is the head of government, and of a pluriform multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the Regional Government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Regional Council.

The Statute of Veneto was promulgated in 1971 and largely rewritten in 2011. Article 1 defines Veneto as an "autonomous Region", "constituted by the Venetian people and the lands of the provinces of Belluno, Padua, Rovigo, Treviso, Venice, Verona and Vicenza", while maintaining "bonds with Venetians in the world". Article 2 sets forth the principle of the "self-government of the Venetian people" and mandates the Region to "promote the historical identity of the Venetian people and civilisation".[1]

On 22 October 2017 an autonomy referendum took place in Veneto: 57.2% of Venetians participated and 98.1% voted "yes".

The current president of Veneto is Luca Zaia of Liga VenetaLega, by far the largest party in the Regional Council.

Political history

Prior to the rise of Fascism, most of the deputies elected in Veneto were part of the liberal establishment (see Historical Right, Historical Left and Liberals), which governed Italy for decades, but also the main opposition parties, namely the Radical Party and the Italian Socialist Party, had a good sway among Venetian voters. In the 1919 general election, the first held with proportional representation, the Catholic-inspired Italian People's Party came first with 42.6% (gaining at least 10% more than in any other region) and the Socialists were in second place with 36.2%. In the 1924 general election, which led Italy to dictatorship, Veneto was one of the few regions, along with Lombardy and Piedmont, which did not return an absolute majority to the National Fascist Party.[2]

From World War II to 1994 Veneto was the heartland of Christian Democracy, which polled 60.5% in the 1953 general election and steadily above 50% until the late 1970s, and led the Regional Government from its establishment in 1970 to 1993. In the 1990s Veneto became a stronghold of the centre-right Pole/House of Freedoms coalition, which governed the region from 1995 to 2010 under Giancarlo Galan of Forza Italia. In 2010 Galan was replaced by Luca Zaia of Liga VenetaLega Nord, who obtained a hefty and record-breaking 60.2% of the vote and whose coalition included The People of Freedom/Forza Italia and, since 2013, the New Centre-Right;[3] Liga Veneta was the largest party with 35.2% of the vote. Zaia and Liga Veneta were confirmed in 2015, with a reduced but more cohesive majority, due to the split of Tosi List for Veneto and the diminishment of Forza Italia: Zaia won 50.1% of the vote, while Liga Veneta a thumping 40.9%, largely ahead of the opposition Democratic Party's 20.5%.

Veneto is home to Venetian nationalism (or Venetism), a political movement that appeared in the 1970s, demanding political and fiscal autonomy for the region (which is felt by Venetists to be a nation in its own right) and promoting Venetian culture, language and history. This was the background from which Liga Veneta emerged in 1980. In the 1990s and 2000s other Venetist parties (the Union of the Venetian People, the Veneto Autonomous Region Movement, Lega Autonomia Veneta, Liga Veneta Repubblica, North-East Project, etc.) emerged, but they never touched the popularity of Liga Veneta, which was a founding member of Lega Nord in 1991. Some Venetists have campaigned for federal reform and/or autonomy, others (notably including the Venetian National Party, the Party of the Venetians, Veneto State, Venetian Independence, Veneto First, Plebiscito.eu, Venetian Left, Independence We Veneto and We Are Veneto) for outright independence.

Executive branch

The Regional Government is led by the President of Veneto and composed of the President and ten Ministers (Assessori), including a Vice President.

Current composition

The current regional government has been in office 16 October 2020, under the leadership of President Luca Zaia of Liga VenetaLega Nord.

Zaia II Government
Office Name Party
President Luca Zaia Liga Veneta
Vice President Elisa De Berti Liga Veneta
Minister of Legal Affairs, Public Works, Infrastructures and Transports Elisa De Berti Liga Veneta
Minister of Planning, Budget, Patrimony and Local Government Francesco Calzavara Liga Veneta
Minister of Health, Social Affairs and Social Programs Manuela Lanzarin Liga Veneta
Minister of Economic Development, Energy and Special Status for Venice Roberto Marcato Liga Veneta
Minister of EU Programs, Agriculture, Tourism and International Trade Federico Caner Liga Veneta
Minister of Education, Formation, Labour and Equal Opportunities Elena Donazzan Brothers of Italy
Minister of Environment, Climate and Civil Protection Gianpaolo Bottacin Liga Veneta
Minister of Culture, City Planning, Security, Hunting and Fishing Cristiano Corazzari Liga Veneta

Source: Veneto Region – Regional Government

List of previous Governments

Governments of Veneto
Government President Party Coalition Vice President Party Term Legislature
Tomelleri I Angelo Tomelleri DC DC Paolo Tartari DC 1970–1971 I Legislature
Tomelleri II Angelo Tomelleri DC DC Paolo Tartari DC 1971–1972
Feltrin Piero Feltrin DC DC Paolo Tartari DC 1972–1973
Tomelleri III Angelo Tomelleri DC DC Marino Cortese DC 1973–1975
Tomelleri IV Angelo Tomelleri DC DCPRI Giancarlo Gambaro DC 1975–1977 II Legislature
Tomelleri V Angelo Tomelleri DC DC Marino Cortese DC 1977–1980
Bernini I Carlo Bernini DC DCPSDI[lower-alpha 1] Marino Cortese DC 1980–1985 III Legislature
Bernini II Carlo Bernini DC DCPSIPSDIPLI Umberto Carraro PSI 1985–1989 IV Legislature
Cremonese I Gianfranco Cremonese DC DCPSIPSDIPLI Umberto Carraro PSI 1989–1990
Cremonese II Gianfranco Cremonese DC DCPSIPRIPSDI Amalia Sartori PSI 1990–1992 V Legislature
Frigo Franco Frigo DC DCPSIFdV Renzo Burro PSI 1992–1993
Pupillo Giuseppe Pupillo PDS DCPDS[lower-alpha 2]PSIFdVUPV Carlo Alberto Tesserin DC 1993–1994
Bottin Aldo Bottin PPI PPI[lower-alpha 3]LVFI[lower-alpha 4]UPVPLICPALP Gian Paolo Gobbo LV 1994–1995
Galan I Giancarlo Galan FI FIANCDU[lower-alpha 5]CCD Bruno Canella AN 1995–2000 VI Legislature
Galan II Giancarlo Galan FI FILVANCDU[lower-alpha 6]CCD[lower-alpha 6] Fabio Gava FI 2000–2005 VII Legislature
Galan III Giancarlo Galan FI FI[lower-alpha 7]LVAN[lower-alpha 7]UDCNPSI Luca Zaia / Franco Manzato LV 2005–2010 VIII Legislature
Zaia I Luca Zaia LV LVPdL[lower-alpha 8] Marino Zorzato PdL 2010–2015 IX Legislature
Zaia II Luca Zaia LV LVFI[lower-alpha 9] Gianluca Forcolin LV 2015–2020 X Legislature
Zaia III Luca Zaia LV LVFdI Elisa De Berti LV 2020–present XI Legislature

Source: Region of Veneto

  1. The PSDI joined the government in 1981.
  2. The PDS succeeded to the PCI in 1991.
  3. The PPI succeeded to the DC in 1994.
  4. Some members of the disbanded DC formed FI in 1994.
  5. The regional councillors of the CDU were elected from a joint list with FI.
  6. The CDU and the CCD were merged into the UDC in 2002.
  7. FI and AN were merged into the PdL in 2009.
  8. The PdL was disbanded in 2013; its members joined either FI or the NCD. Vice President Marino Zorzato joined the NCD.
  9. The party's sole regional minister, Elena Donazzan left in 2018 and joined FdI in 2019.

Legislative branch

The Regional Council of Veneto (Consiglio Regionale del Veneto) is composed of 51 members. 49 councillors are elected in provincial constituencies by proportional representation using the largest remainder method with a Droop quota and open lists, while the remaining two are the elected President and the candidate for President who comes second. The winning coalition wins a bonus of seats in order to make sure the elected President has a majority in the Council.[4][5][6]

The Council is elected for a five-year term, but, if the President suffers a vote of no confidence, resigns or dies, under the simul stabunt, simul cadent (literally: "they will stand together or they will fall together") clause introduced in 1999, also the Council is dissolved and a snap election is called.[7]

Current composition

Distribution of Seats in the Regional Council
Political Group Leader 2020 Now
Zaia for President[lower-alpha 1] Alberto Villanova 23 18
Liga VenetaLega Giuseppe Pan 10 13
Democratic Party Giacomo Possamai 6 6
Brothers of Italy Raffaele Speranzon 5 5
Forza Italia Elisa Venturini 2 2
Five Star Movement Erika Baldin 1 1
Venetian Autonomy List Tomas Piccinini 1 1
Veneto We Want Elena Ostanel 1 1
Green Europe Cristina Guarda 1 1
Mixed Group[lower-alpha 2] Stefano Valdegamberi 1 3

Sources: Regional Council of Veneto – Groups and Regional Council of Veneto – Members

  1. All the group members are affiliated to Liga VenetaLega Nord.
  2. Current members: Fabiano Barbisan and Stefano Valdegamberi, both members of Liga Veneta, who switched to the group for technical reasons soon after the election, plus Arturo Lorenzoni, the centre-left candidate for President, who is close to both the Democratic Party and Veneto We Want (Art.1, SI, etc.).

Local government

Provinces

Veneto is subdivided into seven provinces, including Venice which has functioned as a metropolitan city since 2015.

All the seven provinces, but especially Vicenza, Verona and Padua, were long Christian Democratic heartlands. In the early 1990s, when the Venetian and Italian party systems experienced huge realignments, Treviso, Vicenza and Verona became strongholds of Liga VenetaLega Nord, while in Padua, the region's most populated, Forza Italia/The People of Freedom/Forza Italia was the dominant political force; only two provinces, Venice and Rovigo, have traditionally been the powerbases of the centre-left and, more recently, the Democratic Party, while Belluno is a swing province. In the 2015 regional election Liga Veneta came largely first in each and every province.

Since 2014 provinces have lost many powers to the region and the municipalities, and, contextually, provincial presidents have been elected by mayors and municipal councillors, whose votes are weighted according to the population of their municipalities. In some cases, elected Presidents represent bipartisan or trans-party coalitions. For instance, Enoch Soranzo was elected in Padua thanks to the decisive support of the Democratic Party, while the majority of his party, Liga Veneta, had endorsed another candidate,[8] and Achille Variati was endorsed both by the Democrats and Forza Italia in Vicenza.[9] In 2015 the Province of Venice was replaced by the Metropolitan City of Venice and the mayor of Venice, Luigi Brugnaro, was sworn in as metropolitan mayor too.

Province Inhabitants President Party Election
Province of Padua 936,887 Fabio Bui Democratic Party 2018
Province of Verona 922,383 Manuel Scalzotto Liga Veneta 2018
Province of Treviso 885,447 Stefano Marcon Liga Veneta 2016
Province of Vicenza 867,314 Fabio Rucco Independent (Brothers of Italy) 2018
Province of Venice
Metropolitan City of Venice
855,696 Luigi Brugnaro
(metropolitan mayor)
Independent (Forza Italia) 2015
Province of Rovigo 240,540 Ivan Dall'Ara Independent (Forza Italia) 2018
Province of Belluno 206,856 Roberto Padrin Independent (Democratic Party) 2018

Municipalities

Twenty-seven comuni of Veneto have more than 25,000 inhabitants.

Eleven are controlled by Liga Veneta, five by the Democratic Party, four by Forza Italia and one by the Five Star Movement. Six mayors are formally non-party independents: three of these are supported by Liga Veneta and Forza Italia, another by the Democratic Party and the remaining two by local independent coalitions.

Municipality Inhabitants Mayor Party Election
Venice (list) 263,352 Luigi Brugnaro Independent (Forza Italia) 2020
Verona (list) 258,765 Federico Sboarina Independent (Forza Italia) 2017
Padua (list) 210,401 Sergio Giordani Independent (Democratic Party) 2017
Vicenza (list) 112,953 Francesco Rucco Independent (Brothers of Italy) 2018
Treviso (list) 83,731 Mario Conte Liga Veneta 2018
Rovigo (list) 51,867 Edoardo Gaffeo Democratic Party 2019
Chioggia 49,706 Alessandro Ferro Five Star Movement 2016
Bassano del Grappa 43,372 Elena Pavan Liga Veneta 2019
San Donà di Piave 41,778 Andrea Cereser Democratic Party 2018
Schio 39,355 Valter Orsi Independent (ex-Liga Veneta) 2019
Belluno (list) 35,870 Jacopo Massaro Independent (ex-Democratic Party) 2017
Mira 38,575 Marco Dori Democratic Party 2017
Conegliano 34,891 Fabio Chies Forza Italia 2017
Villafranca di Verona 33,246 Roberto Dall'Oca Forza Italia 2018
Castelfranco Veneto 33,234 Stefano Marcon Liga Veneta 2020
Montebelluna 33,194 Marzio Favero Liga Veneta 2016
Vittorio Veneto 28,232 Antonio Miatto Liga Veneta 2019
Spinea 27,927 Martina Vesnaver Liga Veneta 2019
Mogliano Veneto 27,659 Davide Bortolato Liga Veneta 2019
Mirano 27,045 Maria Rosa Pavanello Democratic Party 2017
Valdagno 26,234 Giancarlo Acerbi Democratic Party 2019
Jesolo 26,122 Valerio Zoggia Forza Italia 2017
Arzignano 25,844 Alessia Bevilacqua Liga Veneta 2019
Albignasego 25,577 Filippo Giacinti Forza Italia 2016
Legnago 25,351 Graziano Lorenzetti Liga Veneta 2019
Portogruaro 25,142 Florio Favero Liga Veneta 2020
San Giovanni Lupatoto 25,066 Attilio Gastaldello Liga Veneta 2016

Political parties and elections

Latest regional election

The latest regional election took place on 20–21 September 2020.

Luca Zaia of Liga VenetaLega was re-elected President by a landslide 76.8% of the vote, while his main rival Arturo Lorenzoni stopped at 15.7%. Liga Veneta, which ran an official party list and a list named after Zaia, was confirmed the largest in the region with a combined 61.5% of the vote. The Democratic Party came second with 11.9% and the Brothers of Italy third with 9.6%. The total score of Venetist parties was 65.6%, the highest ever.

20–21 September 2020 Venetian regional election results
Candidates Votes % Seats Parties Votes % Seat
Luca Zaia 1,883,959 76.79 1 Zaia for President 916,087 44.57 23
League SalviniVenetian League[10] 347,832 16.92 9
Brothers of Italy 196,310 9.55 5
Forza Italia 73,244 3.56 2
Venetian Autonomy List 48,932 2.38 1
Total 1,582,405 77.00 40
Arturo Lorenzoni 385,768 15.72 1 Democratic Party 244,881 11.92 6
Veneto We Want 41,275 2.01 1
Green Europe 34,647 1.69 1
More Veneto in EuropeVolt 14,246 0.69
Venetian Left 2,405 0.12
Total 337,454 16.42 8
Enrico Cappelletti 79,662 3.25 Five Star Movement 55,281 2.69 1
Paolo Girotto 21,679 0.88 3V Movement 14,916 0.73
Antonio Guadagnini 20,502 0.84 Party of Venetians 19,756 0.96
Paolo Benvegnù 18,529 0.76 Solidarity Environment Work 11,846 0.58
Daniela Sbrollini 15,198 0.62 Italia VivaPSIPRI 12,426 0.60
Patrizia Bertelle 14,518 0.59 Veneto Ecology Solidarity 9,061 0.44
Simonetta Rubinato 13,703 0.56 Veneto for the Autonomies 12,028 0.59
Total candidates 2,453,518 100.00 2 Total parties 2,055,173 100.00 49
Source: Ministry of the Interior

Latest general election in Veneto

The centre-right coalition (48.1%), dominated by the Lega (Liga Veneta), obtained a resounding victory, being largely ahead of the Five Star Movement (24.4%) and the centre-left coalition (20.3%). The Lega (32.2%) was largely the largest party, followed by the Five Star Movement (24.4%), the Democratic Party (16.7%) and Forza Italia (10.6%). Under the new electoral system, which re-introduced single-seat constituencies, the centre-right won all such constituencies.

Chamber of Deputies
Coalition Party Proportional First-past-the-post Total
seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Centre-right coalition Lega (incl. Liga Veneta)918,98532.2111,373,37248.11223
Forza Italia (incl. VpA)302,87910.6369
Brothers of Italy119,7704.2213
Us with Italy31,7381.1---
161935
Five Star Movement696,74124.48696,74124.4-8
Centre-left coalition Democratic Party477,02516.77579,89720.3-7
More Europe77,3442.7---
Together14,2340.5---
Popular Civic List11,2940.4---
7-7
Free and Equal77,6232.7-77,6232.7--
The People of Family30,2331.1-30,2331.1--
Casa Pound Italy28,0781.0-28,0781.0--
Others71,6462.5-71,6462.5--
Total2,856,590100.0312,856,590100.01950

Sources: Ministry of the Interior, Corriere del Veneto

Senate
Coalition Party Proportional First-past-the-post Total
seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Centre-right coalition Lega (incl. Liga Veneta)839,58631.851,272,55548.249
Forza Italia (incl. VpA)286,90610.9235
Brothers of Italy113,1084.3112
Us with Italy32,9551.2-11
8917
Five Star Movement647,96024.54647,96024.5-4
Centre-left coalition Democratic Party450,23017.03539,39820.4-3
More Europe66,9702.5---
Together12,7090.5---
Popular Civic List9,4890.4---
3-3
Free and Equal66,8132.5-66,8132.5--
The People of Family28,5931.1-28,5931.1--
Casa Pound Italy22,6190.9-22,6190.9--
Others63,5252.4-63,5252.4--
Total2,641,463100.0152,641,463100.0924

Sources: Ministry of the Interior, Corriere della Sera

Notes

    References

    Sources

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.