The “mother of all reforms”, as the Prime Minister called it Giorgia Meloni, we have to do it. Italians promote debuted he’direct election of the prime minister: data emerges from a survey created by Roberto Baldassari, general director of Lab 21.01, to Italian business. 57.3% of Italians are in favor of the direct election of the prime minister, as foreseen by the constitutional reform carried out by the minister Elisabetta Casellati.
“It is a result that is not surprising, on the contrary, it confirms our analysis – says the Minister of Institutional Reforms and Regulatory Simplification -. For a long time, Italians were condemned to irrelevance as they saw their vote go up in smoke. witnessed for many of ten years by governments that did not correspond to the popular will. Finally, the constitutional reform gives citizens a voice again, bringing them closer to politics and electoral events, strengthening the democratic circuit of participation.”
The text approved by the government will begin processing in Parliament. 42.7% of the sample was against. In optics Popular referendum on constitutional reform, an almost certain scenario, unless the reform has two thirds in Parliament, the 48.2% of the sample declares that they will vote yes. Only 25.2% will vote no while 26.7% of those interviewed still declared themselves undecided. Furthermore, 60.1% of those interviewed consider the role of the candidate for prime minister to be very important in the event of direct elections.
O survey it also provides voting guidelines for Italians. There are small differences between the parties. Brothers from Italy decreasing slightly to 29.2 percent. There turns on back to 10.7. Grow up Strength Italy (5.7 percent), the DP rises, but always remains below 20% (19.5), Greens-Left Alliance 4.1. Shut up 5 Star Movement (16.6 percent). Overall, the center-right is stable at 46 percent, the center-left is growing at 26.1 percent.
Source: IL Tempo

Emma Fitzgerald is an accomplished political journalist and author at The Nation View. With a background in political science and international relations, she has a deep understanding of the political landscape and the forces that shape it.