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More than 1 million Italians abroad cast ballots in parl. election

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  • More than 1 million Italians abroad cast ballots in parl. election

    More than 1 million Italians abroad cast ballots in parliamentary election

    AP Worldstream; Apr 08, 2006
    MARTA FALCONI

    More than 1 million Italians living abroad voted in the country's
    parliamentary election, according to a final tally, and their ballots
    could be decisive in a close race.

    This election marked the first time expatriates were allowed to vote
    in a general election without having to travel back to Italy Around
    1.1 million Italians abroad, or 42 percent of those eligible, sent in
    their ballots by mail in early voting, the Foreign Ministry said.

    Official results won't be released until after the Sunday-Monday
    domestic voting to choose between blocs led by Premier Silvio
    Berlusconi and his center-left challenger, former European Commission
    President Romano Prodi.

    About 2.6 million citizens abroad were eligible to vote to elect 18
    lawmakers who, for the first time, will be responsible for
    representing their interests in the national legislature. Those
    lawmakers will fill 12 new seats in the Chamber of Deputies, the lower
    house of parliament, and six in the Senate.

    Around 47 million citizens who live in Italy will vote this weekend.

    Latin American consulates reported the highest average ballot return
    rate, with about 52 percent of Italians voting, the ministry said. The
    highest return was in Uruguay, where 63 percent of Italians
    voted. Campaigning politicians paid special attention to Latin America
    _ Argentina in particular because it is home to hundreds of thousands
    of expatriates. Fifty-six percent of Italians living there voted.

    Europe had an average return rate of about 38 percent, with Armenia
    topping the list with 95 percent, the ministry reported. About 37
    percent of Italians living in North America voted, with the highest
    returns in Barbados at 81 percent. Africa, Asia and Oceania reported
    an average of 44 percent, with 100 percent _ or 32 people _ voting in
    Kuwait, the ministry said.

    Until now, Italians wishing to vote in their country's general
    elections had to fly back to Italy. A 2001 law, one of the first
    pieces of legislation from Berlusconi's five-year conservative
    government, gave citizens who live abroad the right to vote by mail.

    The expatriate representatives will have full voting rights in Italy's
    parliament, giving Italians abroad the chance to influence decisions
    not just on issues concerning them directly, but also on those
    affecting domestic policies in Italy.

    In addition to giving overseas voters the right to cast ballots, the
    law also created four huge electoral districts to represent Italians
    who live overseas in Parliament, which is composed of a 315-seat
    Senate and 630-seat Chamber of Deputies.

    In recent weeks, politicians of all stripes have been crisscrossing
    the globe trying to woo voters.
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