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A referendum in Italy on citizenship requirements and job protection is likely to have failed, as turnout was far below the required threshold, polling agency YouTrend said on Monday.
Turnout needed to be at least 50% plus one vote to make the referendum results binding, but based on data collected from 60,000 polling stations, turnout was around 30%.
The referendum, proposed by trade unions and civic organisations, addresses issues that have generated political debate in Italy in recent years, particularly labour market reform, primarily the 2016 Labour Act, as well as migrant reception and integration policies.
The first four questions relate to labour issues and concern the increasing protection of workers, small enterprises and their obligations towards employees, short-term contracts, and the responsibility of clients towards subcontracting parties and employees’ safety.
The fifth question concerns the period of time necessary for non-EU nationals residing in the country to be eligible for Italian citizenship, proposing to reduce it from 10 to five years.
The parties of the ruling coalition, led by Premier Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy, opposed the referendum, with some politicians urging citizens not to participate in the vote.
According to the advocacy group International Democracy Community, although opposition parties have supported the referendum, it is primarily a citizens’ initiative and not a political matter.
“The referendum questions were proposed through a bottom-up approach, and did not come from parliament,” the International Democracy Community said in a statement.
“Members of the Europa+ party launched the initiative on the citizenship question, whilst the Italian General Confederation of Labour (CGIL) has been the initiator of the Labour Act ones, with support from the Democratic Party, the Five Star Movement, and the Green and Left Alliance.”
According to exit data after polls closed at 3 pm, the “yes” vote for the four labour law questions stood at around 85%, while 60% of voters said yes to the citizenship question.
The referendum coincided with local elections in several Italian regions and municipalities.