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    HomeEuropeItaly's proposed bonus-seat electoral system could give Meloni comfortable win, studies show

    Italy’s proposed bonus-seat electoral system could give Meloni comfortable win, studies show

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    By Angelo Amante

    ROME, Feb 27 (Reuters) - ‌A proposed overhaul of Italy's voting system could boost Prime Minister Giorgia ​Meloni's re-election chances next year, studies showed on Friday, suggesting even a small lead over the opposition would be ⁠enough to give her a comfortable win.

    This week, the ruling centre-right parties struck a deal to reform the electoral rules, switching to a fully proportional system including a seat bonus designed to give ​a stable majority to any coalition that wins more than 40% of the vote. The reform still needs parliament's ‌approval.

    A simulation by polling firm YouTrend showed that under Italy's current system - mostly proportional, with 36% of lawmakers elected in first-past-the-post constituencies - neither bloc would secure a parliamentary majority. A purely proportional system would ⁠instead grant 57% of seats in the two houses of parliament to Meloni's ⁠Brothers of Italy party and its allies, the League and Forza Italia.

    "The seat bonus would go entirely to the centre-right as the most-voted-for coalition, turning a lead of just a few percentage points in the polls into a solid parliamentary majority," YouTrend said.

    The winning bloc would receive a 70-seat bonus ‌in the 400-seat lower house and a 35-seat bonus in the 200-seat Senate but this would ⁠be capped at 60% of the total seats "to safeguard the opposition", ‌a coalition statement said.

    The main opposition Democratic Party accused the ​government of distorting the system to maximise its chances of staying in power, while right-wing groups say they only want to ensure a stable government after the 2027 vote.

    A study by pollster ‌Noto Sondaggi for daily La Stampa said currently the centre-right was ​potentially ahead by four percentage points - winning ⁠it up to 242 lower house seats under the proposed law, compared with ‌152 for the opposition.

    The leftist bloc, which includes the ⁠Five Star Movement, failed to forge an alliance at the 2022 election, handing Meloni an easy win.

    A broad opposition alliance is expected to form next year, which YouTrend said under the current system ​could give the left an edge ‌in first-past-the-post contests in southern Italy, where the Five Star Movement has many strongholds.

    "Everyone before Meloni who ⁠has changed the electoral law for political and ​personal gain has ended up losing afterwards," noted the Democratic Party's European lawmaker Stefano Bonaccini.

    (Reporting ​by Angelo Amante; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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