An Entity of Type: Thing, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

The 2012 Italian local elections were held on 6–7 May, with a second round on 20–21 May. In Italy, direct elections were held in 948 municipalities: in each municipality (comune) were chosen mayor and members of the City Council. Of the 948 municipalities, 28 were provincial capitals and only 176 had a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants (10,000 for Sicily). Citizens living in Italy who were 18 or over on election day were entitled to vote in the local council elections. The deadline for voters to register to vote in the 6–7 May elections was midday on Tuesday 3 April 2012.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • The 2012 Italian local elections were held on 6–7 May, with a second round on 20–21 May. In Italy, direct elections were held in 948 municipalities: in each municipality (comune) were chosen mayor and members of the City Council. Of the 948 municipalities, 28 were provincial capitals and only 176 had a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants (10,000 for Sicily). Citizens living in Italy who were 18 or over on election day were entitled to vote in the local council elections. The deadline for voters to register to vote in the 6–7 May elections was midday on Tuesday 3 April 2012. For the first time there weren't provincial elections around Italy because they were abolished by the Law n.3660 of 4 December 2011. Instead of a president, the provincial government would be entrusted to a Special Commissioner. Other elections were taken on 10–11 June with a second round on 24–25 June in 65 municipalities of Sardinia: important cities like Alghero and Oristano chose their mayors and councils. Total voter turnout on the first round was of 66.9%, lower than that of 2007; 667 municipalities in the first round had a mayor elected (except Sicily). (en)
  • Des élections municipales partielles se déroulent en Italie au printemps 2012. Elles concernent 1 012 communes (sur 8 092) et se déroulent sur deux tours à quinze jours d'intervalle. Le premier tour se déroule les 6 et 7 mai (dimanche de 8 h à 22 h, puis lundi de 7 h à 15 h), tandis que le ballottage, concernant 118 communes, se déroule les dimanche 20 et lundi 21. Trois régions autonomes organisent leurs propres élections en mai ou en juin : le Trentin-Haut-Adige le 20 mai, le Val d'Aoste le 27 mai et la Sardaigne les 10 et 11 juin 2012. D'autres sources, comme La Repubblica, donnent un total de 945 communes dont 26 chefs-lieux de provinces. Sans compter le Frioul-Vénétie Julienne, également région autonome, elles concernent 7 202 146 électeurs. Ce sont les premières élections organisées en Italie après la chute du gouvernement Silvio Berlusconi IV et avec le gouvernement Mario Monti, sous le contrecoup de la crise importante de la Ligue du Nord (qui perd tous ses ballotages) et l'émergence du Mouvement 5 étoiles (« Grillini »), contestataire, de Beppe Grillo. Sur 177 villes de plus de 15 000 habitants, 92 sont remportés par le centre gauche (au lieu de 45 en 2007). (fr)
  • Le elezioni amministrative in Italia del 2012 si sono tenute il 6 e 7 maggio (primo turno) e il 20 e 21 maggio (secondo turno). In Sardegna le elezioni si sono tenute il 10 e 11 giugno (primo turno) e il 24 e 25 giugno (secondo turno). In virtù della legge 214/2011, non sono rinnovate le amministrazioni provinciali di Como, Belluno, Vicenza, Genova, La Spezia e Ancona, nonché le province regionali di Caltanissetta e Ragusa. (it)
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 35779225 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 15247 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1065597236 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
rdfs:comment
  • Le elezioni amministrative in Italia del 2012 si sono tenute il 6 e 7 maggio (primo turno) e il 20 e 21 maggio (secondo turno). In Sardegna le elezioni si sono tenute il 10 e 11 giugno (primo turno) e il 24 e 25 giugno (secondo turno). In virtù della legge 214/2011, non sono rinnovate le amministrazioni provinciali di Como, Belluno, Vicenza, Genova, La Spezia e Ancona, nonché le province regionali di Caltanissetta e Ragusa. (it)
  • The 2012 Italian local elections were held on 6–7 May, with a second round on 20–21 May. In Italy, direct elections were held in 948 municipalities: in each municipality (comune) were chosen mayor and members of the City Council. Of the 948 municipalities, 28 were provincial capitals and only 176 had a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants (10,000 for Sicily). Citizens living in Italy who were 18 or over on election day were entitled to vote in the local council elections. The deadline for voters to register to vote in the 6–7 May elections was midday on Tuesday 3 April 2012. (en)
  • Des élections municipales partielles se déroulent en Italie au printemps 2012. Elles concernent 1 012 communes (sur 8 092) et se déroulent sur deux tours à quinze jours d'intervalle. Le premier tour se déroule les 6 et 7 mai (dimanche de 8 h à 22 h, puis lundi de 7 h à 15 h), tandis que le ballottage, concernant 118 communes, se déroule les dimanche 20 et lundi 21. Trois régions autonomes organisent leurs propres élections en mai ou en juin : le Trentin-Haut-Adige le 20 mai, le Val d'Aoste le 27 mai et la Sardaigne les 10 et 11 juin 2012. D'autres sources, comme La Repubblica, donnent un total de 945 communes dont 26 chefs-lieux de provinces. Sans compter le Frioul-Vénétie Julienne, également région autonome, elles concernent 7 202 146 électeurs. (fr)
rdfs:label
  • 2012 Italian local elections (en)
  • Élections municipales italiennes de 2012 (fr)
  • Elezioni amministrative in Italia del 2012 (it)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License