berlusconi - elections - Italy - Romano Prodi
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Two months after the collapse of Romano Prodi's coalition, Italian voters handed media tycoon Silvio Berlusconi a compelling victory, as the centre-right coalition secured a strong majority in both chambers of parliament.
Less than two years after losing to Romano Prodi by a handful of votes, 71-year-old Silvio Berlusconi secured a triumphant win in
The leader of the People of Freedom (PdL) now has to work on much-needed reforms to get the country’s ailing economy back on track. He is also expected to deliver on campaign pledges to tackle the waste crisis in
Buoyed by strong showings from Berlusconi’s regional allies, the rightwing coalition won 344 seats out of 630 in the lower chamber of parliament. At the other end, Walter Veltroni’s centre-left Democratic Party (PD) and his ally the Italy of Values (IdV) together took 246 seats. More surprisingly, Berlusconi’s coalition secured a clear majority in the Senate, with 174 seats to the Left’s 132.
Having played a key part in the Right’s victory, the Northern League is the elections’ other main winner. The populist anti-immigration party doubled its share of the vote since 2006, securing a whopping 60 seats in parliament’s lower chamber. More importantly, the vote confirmed the emergence of a two-party system in
Silvio Berlusconi, again
The sudden collapse of Romano Prodi's coalition left parties scrambling to prepare a political platform for the ensuing campaign. In a battle that has more to do with personalities than policies, Silvio Berlusconi is a unique contender.
Veltroni: Rome's Obama?
A fan of Barack Obama and American pop culture, the former Rome mayor Walter Veltroni is hoping to overturn Berlusconi's massive lead. Can he carry his centre-left Democratic Party to a fairy-tale victory? "Yes we can," says his campaign slogan.
'Heading for a two-party system'
The platforms of the centre-right PdL party and the centre-left PD party have been strikingly similar, says Marc Lazar, a researcher at Sciences-Po Paris. But the big challenge confronting the winner will be reforming Italy’s electoral law.
Bread and butter issues clog up ballot boxes
More and more Italians struggle to afford basic foodstuff such as pasta and bread and candidates in Sunday’s upcoming election promise to have the solution. (Report: A. Masciarelli, M. Codrino, M. Felicetti, S. Taddei)
Pour aller plus loin
- 15/04/2008 : Berlusconi hurries back into business
- 15/04/2008 : Victorious Berlusconi warns of difficulties ahead
- 14/04/2008 : Berlusconi projected winner
- 14/04/2008 : Berlusconi leads in early results
- 10/04/2008 : Courting young voters
- 21/03/2008 : Berlusconi 'would veto Air France/ Alitalia deal'
- 21/03/2008 : Berlusconi favours Italian deal for Alitalia
- 17/03/2008 : Italy approves Alitalia takeover
- 14/03/2008 : The triangle of death
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