1963 Italian Senate election in Lombardy

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1963 Italian Senate election in Lombardy

← 1958 April 28, 1963 1968 →

All 45 Lombard seats to the Italian Senate
  Majority party Minority party Third party
  Aldo Moro headshot.jpg Palmiro Togliatti.jpg Pietro Nenni 2.jpg
Leader Aldo Moro Palmiro Togliatti Pietro Nenni
Party Christian Democracy Communist Party Socialist Party
Last election 44.8%, 16 seats 18.5%, 6 seats 18.5%, 7 seats
Seats won 19 10 8
Seat change Increase3 Increase4 Increase1
Popular vote 1,757,450 910,939 780,648
Percentage 39.9% 20.7% 17.7%
Swing Decrease4.9% Increase2.2% Decrease0.8%

Old local plurality before election

DC

New local plurality

DC

Lombardy elected its forth delegation to the Italian Senate on April 28, 1963. This election was a part of national Italian general election of 1963 even if, according to the Italian Constitution, every senatorial challenge in each Region is a single and independent race.

Lombardy obtained twelve more seats to the Senate, following a constitutional reform.

The election was won by the centrist Christian Democracy, as it happened at national level. Eight Lombard provinces gave a majority or at least a plurality to the winning party, while the agricultural Province of Pavia preferred the Italian Communist Party.

Background[]

The constitution reform of 1963 created dozens of new senatorial seats to improve the representation of minor parties, but the proportional voting system did not impose changes into the total number of local constituencies. The result was that Christian Democracy (DC) elected the major part of its nominees even if it was weakened by Amintore Fanfani's program to create a centre-left government with the Italian Socialist Party (PSI). If the DC paid its toll to the centre-right Italian Liberal Party, which obtained great results in the bourgeois centre of Milan, the PSI lost votes to the Italian Communist Party, and later it suffered a crisis losing his leftist wing, including senator , which created the Soviet-aligned Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity.

Electoral system[]

The electoral system for the 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 suffrage inside their party list were elected.

Results[]

Party votes votes (%) seats swing
Christian Democracy 1,757,450 39.9 19 Increase3
Italian Communist Party 910,939 20.7 10 Increase4
Italian Socialist Party 780,648 17.7 8 Increase1
Italian Liberal Party 400,831 9.1 4 Increase3
Italian Democratic Socialist Party 300,841 6.8 3 Increase1
Italian Social Movement 181,387 4.1 1 =
Others 75,939 1.7 - =
Total parties 4,408,035 100.0 45 Increase12

Sources: Italian Ministry of the Interior

Constituencies[]

Constituency Elected Party Votes % Others
1 Bergamo Cristoforo Pezzini Christian Democracy 55.8%
2 Clusone Christian Democracy 66.8%
3 Treviglio Daniele Turani Christian Democracy 61.2%
4 Brescia Christian Democracy 43.4%
5 Breno
Christian Democracy
Italian Democratic Socialist Party
56.9%
10.8%
6 Chiari Christian Democracy 57.0%
7 Salò Christian Democracy 49.0%
8 Como
Christian Democracy
Italian Socialist Party
40.3%
20.0%
9 Lecco Christian Democracy 54.8%
10 Cantù Mario Martinelli
Christian Democracy
Italian Socialist Party
52.4%
19.6%
11 Cremona Italian Communist Party 27.1% (DC) 38.1%
12 Crema Ennio Zelioli Christian Democracy 51.1%
13 Mantua
Italian Communist Party
Italian Socialist Party
26.5%
21.6%
(DC) 36.2%
14 Ostiglia
Gastone Darè
Italian Communist Party
Italian Socialist Party
34.2%
22.8%
(DC) 29.7%
15 Milan 1 Italian Liberal Party 29.8%
16 Milan 2 Luigi Grassi
Italian Liberal Party
Italian Social Movement
27.5%
8.4%
17 Milan 3
Italo Viglianesi
Italian Liberal Party
Italian Democratic Socialist Party
21.4%
10.8%
18 Milan 4
Italian Liberal Party
Italian Democratic Socialist Party
25.1%
9.8%
19 Milan 5 Italian Communist Party 25.7% (PSI) 19.8%
(PLI) 13.0%
20 Milan 6
Italian Communist Party
Italian Socialist Party
29.1%
21.2%
21 Abbiategrasso
Carlo Arnaudi
Christian Democracy
Italian Socialist Party
40.8%
20.5%
22 Rho

Christian Democracy
Italian Communist Party
Italian Socialist Party
39.6%
26.2%
20.4%
23 Monza Christian Democracy 42.9%
24 Vimercate Christian Democracy 50.1%
25 Lodi Giordano Dell'Amore
Christian Democracy
Italian Communist Party
42.8%
28.1%
26 Pavia Italian Communist Party 30.8% (DC) 28.6%
27 Voghera Italian Communist Party 29.6% (DC) 32.5%
28 Vigevano Italian Communist Party 38.6%
29 Sondrio Athos Valsecchi Christian Democracy 55.9%
30 Varese Christian Democracy 39.7%
31 Busto Arsizio
Christian Democracy
Italian Socialist Party
43.2%
19.6%
  • 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 (usually a Christian democrat) with more votes in their constituency.

Substitutions[]

Notes[]

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