1948 Italian Senate election in Lombardy

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1948 Italian Senate election in Lombardy

April 18, 1948 1953 →

All 31 Lombard seats to the Italian Senate
  First party Second party
  Alcide de Gasperi 2.jpg Palmiro Togliatti.jpg
Leader Alcide De Gasperi Palmiro Togliatti
Party Christian Democracy Popular Democratic Front
Seats won 18 10
Popular vote 1,854,032 1,164,769
Percentage 53.8% 33.8%

Lombardy elected its first delegation to the Italian Senate on April 18, 1948. This election was a part of national Italian general election of 1948 even if, according to the newly established Italian Constitution, every senatorial challenge in each Region is a single and independent race.

The election was won by the centrist Christian Democracy, as it happened at national level. Pavia and Mantua were the sole provinces to oppose this result, giving a plurality to the Social-Communist alliance.

Background[]

Alcide De Gasperi's Christian Democracy had obtained very good results during quite all municipal elections in Lombardy in 1946. However, their Soviet-aligned opponents looked at this region as one of their possible zones of success, considering the local strength of the Socialist Party before the Fascist era.

Even if the Front obtained some seats in the agricultural south, De Gasperi obtained an absolute majority at regional level, with some exceptional peaks in the alpine north: Lombardy became the region with the highest number of constituencies where the landslide clausola[1] was satisfied. The centre-left alliance between the Italian Democratic Socialist Party and the Italian Republican Party obtained some seats in Milan, a city led by Democratic Socialist mayor Antonio Greppi.

Electoral system[]

The electoral system introduced in 1948 for the newly elected Senate was a strange hybrid which established a form of proportional representation into FPTP-like constituencies. A candidate needed a landslide victory of more than 65% of votes to obtain a direct mandate. All constituencies where this result was not reached entered into an at-large calculation based upon the D'Hondt method to distribute the seats between the parties, and candidates with the best percentages of suffrages inside their party list were elected.

Results[]

Party votes votes (%) seats
Christian Democracy 1,854,032 53.8 18
Popular Democratic Front 1,164,769 33.8 10
Socialist Unity+Italian Republican Party 364,642 10.8 3
Others 64,284 1.9 -
Total parties 3,447,727 100.0 31

Sources: Italian Ministry of the Interior

Constituencies[]

Constituency Elected Party Votes % Others
1 Bergamo Cristoforo Pezzini Christian Democracy 73.5%
2 Clusone Pietro Bellora Christian Democracy 81.0%
3 Treviglio Piero Mentasti Christian Democracy 72.7%
4 Brescia Angelo Buizza Christian Democracy 55.8%
5 Breno Angelo Cemmi Christian Democracy 68.6%
6 Chiari Albino Donati Christian Democracy 65.7%
7 Salò Christian Democracy 64.2%
8 Como Mariano Rosati Christian Democracy 60.1%
9 Lecco Enrico Falck Christian Democracy 55.8%
10 Cantù Christian Democracy 60.3%
11 Cremona Popular Democratic Front (PSI) 48.3%
12 Crema Ennio Zelioli Christian Democracy 52.3%
13 Mantua Popular Democratic Front (PSI) 44.0%
14 Ostiglia Popular Democratic Front (PCI) 56.8%
15 Milan 1 Merzagora's 2nd election 57.9% seat ceded to Samek Lodovici
16 Milan 2 Socialist Unity+Republican Party (PRI) 21.0% (DC) 54.5%
17 Milan 3 Socialist Unity+Republican Party (PSDI) 19.5%
18 Milan 4 Socialist Unity+Republican Party (PRI) 20.0%
19 Milan 5 Popular Democratic Front (PCI) 42.7%
20 Milan 6 Popular Democratic Front (PSI) 51.8%
21 Abbiategrasso
Antonio Banfi
Christian Democracy
Popular Democratic Front (PCI)
51.4%
40.6%
22 Rho Christian Democracy 53.6% (PSI) 36.2%
23 Monza Christian Democracy 54.0%
24 Vimercate Cesare Merzagora Christian Democracy (Indep.) 60.2%
25 Lodi Popular Democratic Front (PCI) 43.6% (DC) 47.7%
26 Pavia Popular Democratic Front (Gds) 43.0%
27 Voghera Popular Democratic Front (PCI) 38.7%
28 Vigevano Popular Democratic Front (PSI) 50.7%
29 Sondrio Ezio Vanoni Christian Democracy 67.1%
30 Varese Christian Democracy 55.7%
31 Busto Arsizio Christian Democracy 53.8%
  • Senators with a direct mandate have bold percentages. Please remember that the electoral system was, in the other cases, a form of proportional representation and not a FPTP race: so candidates winning with a simple plurality could have (and usually had) a candidate (always a Christian democrat) with more votes in their constituency.

Substitutions[]

  • for Rho (36.2%) replaced in 1948. Reason: death.
  • for Milan 2 (54.5%) replaced in 1950. Reason: death.
  • for Lodi (47.7%) replaced in 1952. Reason: death.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Italian Ministry of Interior
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