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POLITICS

What are Italians being asked to vote on in Sunday’s ‘justice referendum’?

On June 12th, Italian citizens will cast their ballots in a referendum proposing reforms to Italy's justice system - but exactly what issues are they voting on?

Italians will go to the polls on Sunday to vote in a referendum on reforms to Italy's justice system.
Italians will go to the polls on Sunday to vote in a referendum on reforms to Italy's justice system. Photo by ANDREAS SOLARO / AFP.

Italians have received colourful voting cards in the mail ahead of a referendum in the country this weekend – though many say the explanations written within have left them none the wiser about the issues they’ll be voting on.

As a result, readers of The Local who received these cards have been in touch to ask for an explanation.

From 7am until 11pm on Sunday, Italians of voting age will head to the polls to make their voices heard in the referendum giustizia, or ‘justice referendum’.

There are five reforms on the table, each of which proposes to repeal an existing law or rule in Italy. That means a ‘no’ is a vote to maintain the status quo, while a check in the ‘yes’ box says you’re in favour of scrapping the current system.

For a ‘yes’ result to be valid, a quorum of 50 percent plus one of the Italian electorate must have voted – which means turnout is key.

Each of the five proposals comes with a different colour ballot card: red, orange, yellow, grey and green.

The proposals are being voted on separately, so it’s not unlikely that some reforms will be approved and others rejected. But what issues are actually up for discussion?

Here’s our guide to the referendum giustizia.

1. Repealing the ‘Severino Law’ (red card)

Under the Severino Law, which came into force at the start of 2013, any politician in Italy who is convicted of a certain type of crime and is sentenced to at least two years in prison is banned from holding public office for at least six years.

To date, the law’s most high profile application has been in ejecting Silvio Berlusconi from the Italian senate following his 2012 conviction for tax fraud.

If the Severino Law is repealed, it will be up to individual judges to decide on a case by case basis whether a convicted politician should be allowed see out their mandate or run for office – as was previously the case up until 2013.

Those in favour of maintaining the law argue that it remains an important weapon in Italy’s fight against corruption and that scrapping it would allow politicians convicted of serious crimes to act with impunity.

Silvio Berlusconi was ejected from the Italian senate under the Severino Law in 2013 following a conviction for tax fraud.
Silvio Berlusconi was ejected from the Italian senate under the Severino Law in 2013 following a conviction for tax fraud. Photo by Filippo Monteforte/AFP.

Others say the law unfairly denies some people the presumption of innocence; and unusually, groups on both ends of political spectrum have come out in favour of its abolition.

Representatives of both the far-right League party (who, along with the libertarian Radical Party, fought for the referendum to be held in the first place) and the Socialist Party say the fact that the ban automatically applies to local and regional (but not national) politicians even if their conviction is subsequently overturned makes the law fundamentally flawed.

The socialist newspaper Avanti! cited the case of Mimmo Lucano, a pro-refugee mayor who in 2021 received a 13-year prison sentence for abetting illegal immigration. According to a recent article on the Global Anticorruption Blog, even if Lucano is acquitted on appeal, his ban on running for office will remain in place for eight years.

READ ALSO: More judges, faster trials: Italy approves major overhaul of criminal justice system

2. Softening pre-trial detention (orange card)

Accused criminals awaiting trial in Italy can be placed under house arrest or put in jail for a wide range of reasons, including if the suspect is perceived to be a flight risk, is likely to ‘contaminate’ the evidence against them, or is at risk of repeating the same offence before they stand trial.

It’s on this last point – pre-trial detention based on the likelihood of the suspect’s reoffending – that the referendum proposes the law be softened, by allowing most people who fall into this category to remain at liberty until the trial is over.

A view of the Sant Anna prison in Modena, Emilia-Romagna.

A view of the Sant Anna prison in Modena, Emilia-Romagna. Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP.

Those in favour of a ‘yes’ vote argue that the reform would ease pressure on Italy’s overcrowded prison system, and that the presumption of freedom would be granted only to suspects accused of non-violent offences, such as illegal party financing.

Those who argue that the law should remain as it is say it’s already lenient enough, providing for pre-trial imprisonment for non-violent offences only when they carry a sentence of at least five years.

3. Career separation for judges and prosecutors (yellow card)

Under the current rules in Italy, it’s possible for public prosecutors and judges to switch back and forth between the two roles multiple times (up to four) over the course of an individual’s career.

This reform proposes to put an end to this revolving door, requiring people to pick one of the two professions at the start of their career and stick with it for the duration.

READ ALSO: Italy passes law to stop criminals profiting from slow-paced justice system

Those in support of the reform say it’s healthy to have a clear separation between the fundamentally different roles of arguing cases and deciding them.

Those against say this is a constitutional matter, not one to be decided in a referendum; that it wouldn’t make any real difference, as the professions are so closely intertwined; and that a reform proposed by Justice Minister Marta Cartabia would resolve the issue anyway (though the Cartabia reform would in fact allow one career switch, ten years in).

4. Letting lawyers and professors evaluate judges (grey card)

Every four years in Italy, judges are assessed by the members of the High Council of the Judiciary (Consiglio superiore della magistratura, or Csm), the self-governing body of Italy’s judiciary.

The Csm reviews the judge’s record and makes decisions on their career progression based on recommendations from two other bodies: the Supreme Court’s judicial board (Consiglio direttivo della Corte di Cassazione) and the judicial councils (Consigli giudiziari) at each court of appeal.

Italy's Supreme Court (Corte di Cassazione) in Rome.

Italy’s Supreme Court (Corte di Cassazione) in Rome. Photo by FILIPPO MONTEFORTE / AFP)

Lawyers and professors can be members of these bodies, but currently, they have no say when it comes to evaluating judges. This reform proposes to give these council ‘lay members’ the right to weigh in on the process.

Proponents of the proposal say the change would make the process more democratic and objective; critics say it’s not a good idea to allow lawyers to grade judges who could be deciding their cases.

5. Scrapping signatures to apply to the Csm (green card)

If you want to put yourself forward to be elected as a councillor on the Csm, you first need to gather 25 signatures in favour of your candidacy. This last reform proposes to abolish that requirement.

Those in favour say it will make the process less political; those against, that it won’t make a discernible difference or that the change is already being proposed in Cartabia’s reform.

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POLITICS

Can foreign residents in Italy vote in the European elections?

The year 2024 is a bumper one for elections, among them the European elections in June. Italy is of course a member of the EU - so can foreign residents vote in the elections that will almost certainly affect their daily lives?

Can foreign residents in Italy vote in the European elections?

Across Europe, people will go to the polls in early June to select their representatives in the European Parliament, with 76 seats up for grabs in Italy. 

Although European elections usually see a much lower turnout than national elections, they are still seen as important by Italian politicians.

Giorgia Meloni will stand as a candidate this year, hoping use her personal popularity to give her Brothers of Italy party a boost and build on her success in Italy to “send the left into opposition” at the European level too.

When to vote

Across Italy, polling takes place on Saturday 8th and Sunday 9th June 2024.

Polling stations will be set up in the same places as for national and local elections – usually town halls, leisure centres and other public buildings.

You have to vote at the polling station for the municipality in which you are registered as a resident, which should be indicated on your electoral card.

Polling stations open at 8am and mostly close at 6pm, although some stay open later.

Unlike in presidential or local elections, there is only a single round of voting in European elections.

Who can vote? 

Italian citizens – including dual nationals – can vote in European elections, even if they don’t live in Italy. As is common for Italian domestic elections, polling booths will be set up in Italian consulates around the world to allow Italians living overseas to vote.

Non-Italian citizens who are living in Italy can only vote if they have citizenship of an EU country. So for example Irish citizens living in Italy can vote in European elections but Americans, Canadians, Australians, etc. cannot.

Brits in Italy used to be able to vote before Brexit, but now cannot – even if they have the post-Brexit carta di soggiorno.

If you have previously voted in an election in Italy – either local or European – you should still be on the electoral roll.

If not, in order to vote you need to send an application more than 90 days before the election date.

How does the election work?

The system for European elections differs from most countries’ domestic polls. MEPs are elected once every five years.

Each country is given an allocation of MEPs roughly based on population size. At present there are 705 MEPs: Germany – the country in the bloc with the largest population – has the most while the smallest number belong to Malta with just six.

Italy, like most of its EU neighbours, elects its MEPs through direct proportional representation via the ‘list’ system, so that parties gain the number of MEPs equivalent to their share of the overall vote.

So, for example, if Meloni’s party won 50 percent of the vote they would get 38 out of the total of 76 Italian seats.

Exactly who gets to be an MEP is decided in advance by the parties who publish their candidate lists in priority order. So let’s say that Meloni’s party does get that 50 percent of the vote – then the people named from 1 to 38 on their list get to be MEPs, and the people lower down on the list do not, unless a candidate (for example, Meloni) declines the seat and passes it on to the next person on the list.

In the run up to the election, the parties decide on who will be their lead candidates and these people will almost certainly be elected (though Meloni would almost definitely not take up her seat as an MEP, as this would mean resigning from office in Italy).

The further down the list a name appears, the less likely that person is to be heading to parliament.

Once in parliament, parties usually seek to maximise their influence by joining one of the ‘blocks’ made up of parties from neighbouring countries that broadly share their interests and values eg centre-left, far-right, green.

The parliament alternates between Strasbourg and Brussels. 

Find out more about voting in the European elections from Italy on the European Parliament’s website or the Italian interior ministry’s website.

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