Abstract

In April 2014, the new Prime Minister, Matteo Renzi, proposed a constitutional reform to overcome the perfect bicameralism model, the reduction in the number of senators, the abolition of certain bodies and changes to the system of distribution of competences between the State and the Regions. As a summary, the reform was intended to promote political stability and institutional governance, approving the Italian political system and its parliamentary regime to that of other European countries. However, after a long parliamentary process, it was flatly rejected in a referendum in December 2016, causing the fall of the government.

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