1995 Lombard regional election

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1995 Lombard regional election

← 1990 23 April 1995 2000 →

All 90[1] seats to the Regional Council of Lombardy
Turnout84.24% (Decrease 6.97%)
  Majority party Minority party Third party
 
Leader Roberto Formigoni Diego Masi Francesco Speroni
Party FI PdD LN
Alliance Centre-right Centre-left
Seats won 54 19 12
Popular vote 2,200,921 1,462,438 937,649
Percentage 41.1% 27.4% 18.7%


President before election

Paolo Arrigoni
LN

President-elect

Roberto Formigoni
FI

The 1995 Lombard regional election took place on 23 April 1995. The 6th term of the Regional Council was chosen.

For the first time the President of the Region was directly elected by the people, although the election was not yet binding and the President-elect could have been replaced during the term.

Roberto Formigoni (member of the right-wing of the Italian People's Party, on the list of Forza Italia) was elected President of the Region, defeating Diego Masi (Segni Pact) and Francesco Speroni (Northern League).

Electoral system[edit]

Lombardy used for the first time the national Tatarella Law to elect its Council. 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.

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 an alliance wins more than 60% of votes, 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.

Council apportionment[edit]

According to the official 1991 Italian census, the 64 Council seats which must be covered by proportional representation were so distributed between Lombard provinces.

 BG   BS   CO   CR   LC   LO   MN   MI   PV   SO   VA  total
7 8 4 2 2 1 3 27 3 1 6 64

The allocation is not fixed. Remaining 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 41 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   PV   SO   VA  total
+3 +3 +1 = = = -1 +1 +2 = +1 +10

As it can be seen, the simple plurality victory of the Pole of Freedoms caused the distribution of ten more seats to the President's majority at provincial level. Brescia and Como and Pavia received two new seats, Bergamo and Lodi and Milan and Varese one each.

Parties and candidates[edit]

Political party or alliance Constituent lists Previous result Candidate
Votes (%) Seats
Centre-left coalition Populars 28.6 25 Diego Masi
Democratic Party of the Left 18.8 15
Federation of the Greens 5.2 3
Pact of Democrats
Labour Federation
Populars and Democrats
Northern LeagueLombard League 18.9 15 Francesco Speroni
Centre-right coalition National Alliance 2.5 2 Roberto Formigoni
Forza Italia – The People's Pole
Christian Democratic Centre
Pensioners of Sun
Pensioners' Party 1.8 1 Carlo Fatuzzo
Pannella's coalition Pannella List 1.0 1 Marco Pannella
Autonomist Front
Communist Refoundation Party Giuseppe Torri

Results[edit]

In the context of the profound political changes that invested Italy between 1992 and 1994, Italian Parliament changed the regional electoral law, adapting them to new majoritarian principle now in vogue in the country, trim and tend bipolar politics. The new political geography, however, did not fit properly to Lombardy where, besides a garrison of far-left, assumed significant importance the presence of Umberto Bossi's Northern League, during the previous five years had not made any secret to aim the conquest of the Regional Presidency as a key step for a transformation of Italy in a federal state. In addition to the League, however, another major innovation had originated in Lombardy in 1994: the descent into the political field of Silvio Berlusconi, who by its movement Forza Italia had collected anti-Communist orphans of deceased traditional parties.

The central political alliances had not been followed up at Lombardy, with the League in sharp contrast with Forza Italia, not only for connecting the latter with the newly formed training nationalist and post-fascist of National Alliance, but mainly because the entrance into the political arena of Forza Italia, accused by the League to be the trojan horse for the recycling of the old political class, had led to the arrest of the Northern League's electoral steady ascent - which had previously yielded the capture of the City of Milan in 1993 - if not also a marked reflux into the consent of the federalist party.

The election on 23 April saw the success of the broad coalition of Berlusconi, grouping ex-Christian Democrats, ex-Socialists, Liberals and post-fascist, and led to presidency Communion and Liberation's Roberto Formigoni that, with the majority premium, was able to give life to the first government in the history of the region that managed to last the entire legislature.

23 April 1995 Lombard regional election results
Candidates Votes % Seats Parties Votes % Seat
Roberto Formigoni 2,386,732 41.07 16
Forza Italia – The People's Pole 1,455,706 29.24 28
National Alliance 496,939 9.98 8
Christian Democratic Centre 110,058 2.21 2
Pensioners of Sun 14,518 0.29
Total 2,077,221 41.72 38
Diego Masi 1,591,417 27.39
Democratic Party of the Left 821,280 16.50 11
Italian People's Party 321,314 6.45 4
Federation of the Greens 154,624 3.11 2
Pact of Democrats 146,293 2.94 2
Labour Federation 18,682 0.38
Populars and Democrats 11,146 0.22
Total 1,473,339 29.59 19
Francesco Speroni 1,087,128 18.71 Northern LeagueLombard League 879,139 17.66 12
Giuseppe Torri 459,051 7.90 Communist Refoundation Party 381,221 7.66 5
Marco Pannella 165,838 2.85
Pannella List 90,445 1.82
Autonomist Front 5.596 0.11
Total 96,041 1.93
Carlo Fatuzzo 120,665 2.08 Pensioners' Party 71,608 1.44
Total candidates 5,810,831 100.00 16 Total parties 4,978,569 100.00 74
Source: Ministry of the Interior – Historical Archive of Elections
Popular vote (party)
FI
29.24%
LN
17.66%
PDS
16.50%
AN
9.98%
PRC
7.66%
PPI
6.45%
FdV
3.11%
PdD
2.94%
CCD
2.21%
Pannella List
1.82%
PP
1.44%
Others
0.99%
Popular vote (coalition)
Pole
41.72%
Olive Tree
29.59%
LN
17.66%
PRC
7.66%
Pannella List
1.93%
Pensioners
1.44%

Results by province[edit]

Election results map. Orange denotes municipalities won by Masi, Blue denotes those won by Formigoni, Green denotes those won by Speroni and Dark red denotes those won by Torri.
Province Roberto Formigoni Diego Masi Francesco Speroni Giuseppe Torri Turnout
Milan 1,055,959 (44.04%) 686,933 (28.65%) 308,557
(12.87%)
219,034
(9.14%)
81.15%
Brescia 261,475 (37.18%) 206,475 (29.36%) 161,185
(22.92%)
43,162
(6.14%)
88.07%
Bergamo 217,679 (34.90%) 141,144 (22.63%) 188,726 (30.26%) 35,518
(5.69%)
87.70%
Varese 207,136 (40.91%) 110,368 (21.80%) 136,866 (27.03%) 33,079
(6.53%)
82.79%
Como 151,132 (44.32%) 73,498
(21.55%)
80,339
(23.56%)
21,126
(6.19%)
84.77%
Pavia 146,761 (44.74%) 86,502
(26.37%)
47,626
(14.52%)
31,512
(9.61%)
85.90%
Mantua 88,822
(35.44%)
95,032 (37.92%) 36,581
(14.60%)
23,035
(9.19%)
87.04%
Cremona 89,472
(39.35%)
70,704
(31.09%)
33,182
(14.59%)
21,589
(9.49%)
89.81%
Lecco 72,633 (36.72%) 58,694
(29.68%)
46,622
(23.57%)
12,263
(6.20%)
87.32%
Lodi 52,052
(41.28%)
39,594
(31.40%)
15,858
(12.58%)
12,021
(9.53%)
89.04%
Sondrio 43,611
(40.00%)
22,473
(20.61%)
31,586
(28.97%)
6,712
(6.16%)
82.75%

Results by capital city[edit]

City Roberto Formigoni Diego Masi Francesco Speroni Giuseppe Torri Turnout
Milan 406,163
(48.34%)
236,249
(28.12%)
77,362
(9.21%)
73,409
(8.74%)
75.87%
Brescia 52,920
(39.95%)
43,844
(33.10%)
20,869
(15.76%)
8,802
(6.65%)
85.27%
Bergamo 33,591
(41.07%)
22,373
(27.35%)
15,659
(19.14%)
4,701
(5.75%)
85.83%
Como 27,783
(49.60%)
13,027
(23.26%)
8,882
(15.86%)
3,801
(6.79%)
80.89%
Varese 22,923
(43.52%)
12,103
(22.98%)
12,746
(24.20%)
2,761
(2.46%)
78.94%
Pavia 22,637
(44.32%)
14,708
(28.80%)
6,701
(13.12%)
4,170
(8.16%)
84.99%
Cremona 20,190
(38.31%)
17,838
(33.85%)
6,353
(12.06%)
5,289
(10.04%)
88.68%
Mantua 12,463
(35.19%)
14,359 (40.54%) 4,015
(11.34%)
3,337
(9.42%)
83.36%
Lecco 12,200
(40.09%)
9,668
(31.77%)
5,555
(18.26%)
1,826
(6.00%)
84.27%
Lodi 12,424
(42.80%)
9,087
(31.31%)
3,574
(12.31%)
2,235
(7.70%)
85.19%
Sondrio 5,938
(42.67%)
3,287
(23.62%)
2,944
(21.16%)
1,103
(7.93%)
77.88%

References[edit]

  1. ^ Ten overhang seats added according to new electoral law.