How and when to vote, handbook for the voter – European Special 2024

How and when to vote, handbook for the voter – European Special 2024
How and when to vote, handbook for the voter – European Special 2024

The polls are open until 11pm to elect the 76 Italian members who will be part of the new European Parliament. Voting will also take place tomorrow, 9 June, from 7am to 11pm. At these same hours, polling stations are also open for the administrative round which will involve 3,698 Municipalities and Piedmont, for the renewal of the Regional Council. For the local elections the possible run-off round will take place on Sunday 23rd and Monday 24th June. There are over 51 million Italians called to vote for the European elections, over 17 million for the local elections and 3.6 Piedmontese voters. The great unknown of abstentionism looms large.

Video European elections, how to vote

THE VOTING VADEMECUM

Anyone who does not have an electoral card can request it, even on voting days, from the electoral office of their municipality. For the European elections, the voter can draw a symbol on the chosen list even without indicating any candidate. You can vote for only one list. Up to a maximum of three preferences can be expressed next to the symbol, indicating the surname of the chosen candidates who must belong to the voted list. Separate voting which would annul the ballot is therefore not permitted.

ANSWERS TO VOTERS’ FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (PDF)

If you choose to express two or three preferences, these must concern candidates of different genders, so as not to cancel the second and third preferences. The electoral system is proportional; the threshold to participate in the distribution of seats is 4% of the votes at a national level. Voters will have a card available which will be of a different color depending on the constituency they belong to: grey, for electoral constituency I – north-western Italy (Piedmont, Valle d’Aosta, Liguria, Lombardy); brown, for electoral constituency II – north-eastern Italy (Veneto, Trentino-Alto Adige, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Emilia Romagna); ruby red, for electoral district III – central Italy (Tuscany, Umbria, Marche, Lazio); orange, for electoral constituency IV – southern Italy (Abruzzo, Molise, Campania, Puglia, Basilicata, Calabria); pink, for electoral constituency V – insular Italy (Sicily, Sardinia).

Eighteen is the minimum voting age; 25 years to apply. In the latter case, Italy is the country with the highest limit in Europe, together with Greece. For the administrative elections, the possible run-off round will take place on Sunday 23rd and Monday 24th June. Over 17 million Italians called to vote. For the regional elections, Piedmontese voters number 3.6 million. The 50 councilors will be elected with a mixed system: proportional for 40 seats, majority for 10.

Reproduction reserved © Copyright ANSA

 
For Latest Updates Follow us on Google News
 

PREV POMEZIA – BAN ON ACCESS TO URBAN AREAS NOTIFIED BY THE CARABINIERI TO 11 YOUNG PEOPLE.
NEXT Healthcare Marche, councilor Vitri urges the provision of additional services: “Serious disparity with the token operators”