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All 80 seats to the Regional Council of Lombardy | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 72.97% ( | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Lombard regional election of 2005 took place on 3–4 April 2005. The 8th term of the Regional Council was chosen. Roberto Formigoni (Forza Italia) was re-elected for the third time in a row President, defeating Riccardo Sarfatti.
Roberto Formigoni is an Italian politician who was born in Lecco, Italy, on 30 March 1947. He was the President of Lombardy in Italy since 1995 till 2013. He is the former unofficial political spokesperson of the Communion and Liberation movement.
Forza Italia was a centre-right political party in Italy with liberal-conservative, Christian-democratic, liberal, social-democratic and populist tendencies. Its leader was Silvio Berlusconi, four times Prime Minister of Italy.
Riccardo Sarfatti was an Italian architect, entrepreneur and politician.
Lombardy uses national Tatarella Law of 1995 to elect its Council, not having written its own legislation. Sixty-four councillors are elected in provincial constituencies by proportional representation using the largest remainder method with a Droop quota and open lists; remained seats and votes are grouped at regional level where a Hare quota is used, and then distributed to provincial party lists.
In Italy, a province (provincia) is an administrative division of intermediate level between a municipality (comune) and a region (regione). From 2015, the provinces were reorganized into "institutional bodies of second level", with the birth of 10 special Metropolitan cities. A further 4 such cities were added later.
Proportional representation (PR) characterizes electoral systems in which divisions in an electorate are reflected proportionately in the elected body. If n% of the electorate support a particular political party, then roughly n% of seats will be won by that party. The essence of such systems is that all votes contribute to the result - not just a plurality, or a bare majority. The most prevalent forms of proportional representation all require the use of multiple-member voting districts, as it is not possible to fill a single seat in a proportional manner. In fact, the implementations of PR that achieve the highest levels of proportionality tend to include districts with large numbers of seats.
The largest remainder method is one way of allocating seats proportionally for representative assemblies with party list voting systems. It contrasts with various divisor methods.
Sixteen councillors are elected at-large using a general ticket: parties are grouped in alliances, and the alliance which receives a plurality of votes elects all its candidates, its leader becoming the President of Lombardy. If a coalition wins more than 50% of the total seats in the Council with PR, only 8 candidates from the regional list will be chosen and the number of those elected in provincial constituencies will be 72; if the winning alliance receives less than 50% of votes, special seats are added to the Council to ensure a large majority for the President's coalition.
At-large is a designation for members of a governing body who are elected or appointed to represent the whole membership of the body, rather than a subset of that membership. At-large voting is in contrast to voting by electoral districts.
General ticket representation is voting system, analogous to block voting, but where voters elect parties, not candidates. The parties then select their representatives to fill out elected office.
A plurality vote or relative majority describes the circumstance when a candidate or proposition polls more votes than any other, but does not receive a majority. For example, if 100 votes were cast, including 45 for Candidate A, 30 for Candidate B and 25 for Candidate C, then Candidate A received a plurality of votes but not a majority. In some votes, the winning candidate or proposition may have only a plurality, depending on the rules of the organization holding the vote.
According to the official 2001 Italian census, the 64 Council seats which must be covered by proportional representation were so distributed between Lombard provinces.
A census is the procedure of systematically acquiring and recording information about the members of a given population. The term is used mostly in connection with national population and housing censuses; other common censuses include agriculture, business, and traffic censuses. The United Nations defines the essential features of population and housing censuses as "individual enumeration, universality within a defined territory, simultaneity and defined periodicity", and recommends that population censuses be taken at least every 10 years. United Nations recommendations also cover census topics to be collected, official definitions, classifications and other useful information to co-ordinate international practice.
BG | BS | CO | CR | LC | LO | MN | MI | MB | PV | SO | VA | total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7 | 8 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 21 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 6 | 64 |
It must be underlined that this allocation is not fixed. Remained seats and votes after proportional distribution, are all grouped at regional level and divided by party lists. The consequent division of these seats at provincial level usually change the original apportionment. Only 37 seats were directly assigned at provincial level, and the final distribution between provinces changed in this way.
BG | BS | CO | CR | LC | LO | MN | MI | MB | PV | SO | VA | total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+1 | +1 | -1 | = | = | = | -1 | +2 | -1 | -1 | -1 | = | -1 |
As it can be seen, the Province of Sondrio remained without representation.
The Province of Sondrio is in the Lombardy region of northern Italy. Its provincial capital is the town Sondrio. As of 2017, it has a population of 181,403.
2005 election led to the return to the guide of the Region, for its third consecutive term, Communion and Liberation's Roberto Formigoni, supported by the center-right coalition.
Communion and Liberation is an Italian Catholic movement founded in 1954 by Fr. Luigi Giussani. Its aim is to present the Christian event in a way which is in tune with contemporary culture, making it a source of new values for the modern world.
If the mechanisms of electoral law generated a Regional Council very similar to the incumbent one, popular vote marked a significant reduction in the gap between the two sides, which was almost halved. The same plurality party, Forza Italia, decreased of more than four hundred preferences. The election was also the test for a list that led, within two years, to the national foundation of a new political entity, the Democratic Party.
The Olive Tree, an alliance comprising The Daisy and the Democrats of the Left, was the largest party in the region for the first time with the 27.1% of votes.
Candidates | Votes | % | Seats | Parties | Votes | % | Seat | ||
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Roberto Formigoni | 2,841,883 | 53.86 | 16 | ||||||
Forza Italia | 1,137,621 | 25.95 | 18 | ||||||
Northern League – Lombard League | 693,464 | 15.82 | 11 | ||||||
National Alliance | 380,962 | 8.69 | 5 | ||||||
Union of Christian and Centre Democrats | 166,761 | 3.80 | 2 | ||||||
New Italian Socialist Party | 36,616 | 0.84 | – | ||||||
Secular Pole (LD–PRI–PLI) | 11,196 | 0.26 | – | ||||||
Total | 2,426,620 | 55.34 | 36 | ||||||
Riccardo Sarfatti | 2,278,173 | 43.17 | 1 | ||||||
The Olive Tree | 1,186,848 | 27.07 | 19 | ||||||
Communist Refoundation Party | 248,703 | 5.67 | 3 | ||||||
Federation of the Greens | 128,060 | 2.92 | 2 | ||||||
Pensioners' Party | 115,481 | 2.63 | 1 [lower-alpha 1] | ||||||
Party of Italian Communists | 104,481 | 2.38 | 1 | ||||||
Italy of Values | 61,431 | 1.40 | 1 | ||||||
Total | 1,845,004 | 42.08 | 28 | ||||||
Gianmario Invernizzi | 142,807 | 2.71 | – | ||||||
Social Alternative | 54,937 | 1.25 | – | ||||||
Lega Padana Lombardia | 39,012 | 0.89 | – | ||||||
Pensions & Work | 7,409 | 0.17 | – | ||||||
Total | 101,358 | 2.31 | – | ||||||
Marco Marsili | 14,008 | 0.27 | – | Liberal Democrats | 11,579 | 0.26 | – | ||
Total candidates | 5,276,871 | 100.00 | 17 | Total parties | 4,384,561 | 100.00 | 63 | ||
Source: Ministry of the Interior |
Province | Roberto Formigoni | Riccardo Sarfatti | Turnout |
---|---|---|---|
Milan | 821,495 (48.74%) | 814,934 (48.36%) | 71.02% |
Brescia | 368,705 (56.90%) | 253,080 (39.06%) | 75.16% |
Bergamo | 347,263 (60.33%) | 214,510 (37.27%) | 74.52% |
Varese | 276,137 (58.39%) | 184,599 (39.03%) | 71.51% |
Monza and Brianza | 243,210 (54.49%) | 193,080 (43.26%) | 75.56% |
Como | 200,396 (62.06%) | 113,623 (35.19%) | 72.51% |
Pavia | 158,119 (52.65%) | 130,671 (43.51%) | 74.21% |
Mantua | 103,207 (45.93%) | 116,766 (51.97%) | 74.07% |
Cremona | 100,900 (50.45%) | 91,718 (45.86%) | 75.15% |
Lecco | 99,286 (53.54%) | 79,452 (42.85%) | 75.37% |
Lodi | 59,923 (50.19%) | 55,364 (46.37%) | 75.50% |
Sondrio | 63,242 (65.91%) | 30,376 (31.66%) | 64.02% |
City | Roberto Formigoni | Riccardo Sarfatti | Turnout |
---|---|---|---|
Milan | 339,015 (49.80%) | 326,009 (47.89%) | 67.62% |
Brescia | 55,968 (50.76%) | 51,312 (46.54%) | 75.52% |
Monza | 37,170 (52.18%) | 32,675 (45.89%) | 74.08% |
Bergamo | 36,453 (54.73%) | 29,072 (43.65%) | 73.12% |
Como | 26,605 (56.56%) | 19,291 (41.01%) | 70.00% |
Varese | 26,594 (58.62%) | 17,944 (39.55%) | 68.95% |
Pavia | 22,852 (50.85%) | 20,930 (46.58%) | 77.88% |
Cremona | 18,937 (45.75%) | 21,319 (51.50%) | 73.22% |
Mantua | 11,639 (40.11%) | 16,902 (58.25%) | 75.52% |
Lecco | 13,961 (52.54%) | 11,964 (44.85%) | 72.71% |
Lodi | 13,495 (52.19%) | 11,511 (44.52%) | 78.18% |
Sondrio | 6,839 (56.60%) | 4,993 (41.32%) | 67.32% |
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