Lombardia and the Veneto overwhelmingly vote for autonomous rule:
Two of
Italy’s wealthiest northern regions on Sunday voted overwhelmingly in favour of
greater autonomy in referenda that took place against the backdrop of
Catalonia’s push for independence from Spain.
Voters in the Veneto region that includes Venice and Lombardy, home to Milan, turned out at the high end of expectations to support the principle of more powers being devolved from Rome, officials said. Veneto President Luca Zaia hailed the results, which were delayed slightly by a hacker attack, as an institutional 'big bang' while reiterating that the region’s aspirations were not comparable to the secessionist agenda that has provoked a constitutional crisis in Spain.
Turnout was projected at between 57-61 percent in Veneto, where support for autonomy is stronger, and at around 40 percent in Lombardy. The presidents of both regions said more than 90 percent of voters who had gone to the ballots had, as expected, done so to support greater autonomy.
The votes are not binding but they will give the leaders of the two regions a strong political mandate when they embark on negotiations with the central government on the transfer of powers from Rome to the regions.
Voters in the Veneto region that includes Venice and Lombardy, home to Milan, turned out at the high end of expectations to support the principle of more powers being devolved from Rome, officials said. Veneto President Luca Zaia hailed the results, which were delayed slightly by a hacker attack, as an institutional 'big bang' while reiterating that the region’s aspirations were not comparable to the secessionist agenda that has provoked a constitutional crisis in Spain.
Turnout was projected at between 57-61 percent in Veneto, where support for autonomy is stronger, and at around 40 percent in Lombardy. The presidents of both regions said more than 90 percent of voters who had gone to the ballots had, as expected, done so to support greater autonomy.
The votes are not binding but they will give the leaders of the two regions a strong political mandate when they embark on negotiations with the central government on the transfer of powers from Rome to the regions.
Hey, the Lombardi have already got a perfectly good, if rather
ugly, castle sitting at the end of the Galleria waiting for a new Duke of Milan
to rule over them, although I'd prefer to rule from the Bergamo high city
myself. Let's face it, liberal democracy in Europe was pretty much a
complete failure across the board even before it turned suicidally
pro-immigrant. Italy certainly managed to accomplish a good deal more of
lasting value in the age of city-states; post-Garibaldi Italy did little more
than produce Fascism and Fiats before getting itself raped twice by Germany.