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To: Travis_Bickle who wrote (63787)4/11/2006 7:51:57 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 361830
 
Prodi Declares Victory in Italian Election
By MARIA SANMINIATELLI, Associated Press Writer



Italy's parliamentary election hung in the balance Tuesday as the country counted ballots cast by Italians living abroad, including in the United States, for six new Senate seats.

But no matter what the outcome, the margin of victory was sure to be so slim, the winner would have a hard time passing legislation, such as measures to deal with Italy's fiscal crisis. That could return Italy to paralysis and instability after Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's five years in power.

Near final returns showed opposition leader Romano Prodi's center-left coalition winning the lower house, while conservatives led by Berlusconi held a one-seat lead in the Senate, with results for six seats elected by Italians abroad still yet to be counted.

Prodi's coalition claimed four of the six seats, giving it the necessary margin for victory, but official results hadn't yet been released.

A jubilant Prodi declared victory in a speech to supporters early Tuesday.

"Until the very end we were left in suspense, but in the end victory has arrived," he said. "Now we have to start working to implement our program and unify the country."

Berlusconi's spokesman contested the victory claim, and a top official in his Forza Italia party indicated the conservatives would request a recount "in order to have a result that we really can consider certain and final."

Prodi's allies conceded after his announcement that results in the Senate were still not complete. They were expected later in the day.

The election marks the first time Italian citizens living abroad had the right to vote by mail in a parliamentary election, thanks to a 2001 law sponsored by Berlusconi's conservative government soon after it came to power.

The law created four huge electoral districts to represent Italians who live overseas. Eighteen lawmakers will be chosen to represent this new constituency, 12 in the Chamber of Deputies and six in the Senate.

Politicians crisscrossed continents and flew across oceans in a scramble to win over the 2.6 million voters abroad. Politicians particularly focused on Argentina, home to hundreds of thousands of Italians. There were about 400,000 eligible Italian voters in the North and Central America expatriate district.

At the close of the deadline for submitting ballots on Thursday, the Italian Consulate in New York, where the highest number of Italian citizens in the United States are concentrated, said it had received more than 18,000 ballots.

During his tenure as premier, Berlusconi, a flamboyant billionaire, had strongly supported President Bush over Iraq despite fierce Italian opposition to the war. Prodi, an economist, said he would bring troops home as soon as possible, security conditions permitting. But the issue was largely deflated before the campaign began, when Berlusconi announced that Italy's troops there would be withdrawn by year's end.

For hours after the vote ended Monday, projections and returns swung dramatically back and forth between the two sides, and without the vote from abroad, the election's outcome was still unclear. Voter turnout was about 84 percent.

The Senate and lower chamber of parliament have equal powers, and any coalition would have to control both in order to form a government. Some center-left and center-right leaders have said if neither side controls both houses, new elections should be called.

Final results in the lower house showed Prodi's coalition winning 49.8 percent of the vote compared to 49.7 percent for Berlusconi's conservatives. The winning coalition is automatically awarded 340 seats in the 630-member chamber.

The Senate is made up of 315 elected lawmakers. There are also seven senators appointed for life, but by tradition they do not take sides.

If parliament is split between the two coalitions, President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi could try to name a government of technocrats at least until another election. He could also seek to fashion a coalition of left and right, but considering the bitter divisions among Italy's political parties, that seemed unlikely.

There is no clear provision in the Italian constitution to deal with a split parliament, and there are no precedents.

"These results mean the country is divided in two. There needs to be a provisional government for a few months, then new elections," said Marco Piva, a 49-year-old banker from Padova, as he took the train to work Tuesday morning. "This is the worst result that we could have had."

Culture Minister Rocco Buttiglione and several other politicians said early Tuesday that both sides must pull together, if only to handle urgent economic matters and the election of a new president after Ciampi's mandate expires in May.

"We have to immediately send a message to the markets, to whomever wants to invest in Italy that the country is not going to fall apart," he said.

Berlusconi, a 69-year-old media mogul and Italy's longest-serving premier since World War II, was battling to capture his third term with an often squabbling coalition of his Forza Italia party, the former neo-fascist National Alliance, pro-Vatican forces and the anti-immigrant Northern League.

The 66-year-old Prodi, a former premier, was making his comeback bid with a potentially unwieldy coalition of moderate Christian Democrats, Greens, liberals, former Communists and Communists.

Italians were mainly preoccupied by economic worries. Berlusconi failed to jump-start a flat economy during his tenure, but promised to abolish a homeowner's property tax. Prodi said he would revive an inheritance tax abolished by Berlusconi, but only for the richest; he also promised to cut payroll taxes to try to spur hiring.

___

Associated Press writers Alessandra Rizzo and Frances D'Emilio in Rome and Rachel Rivera in New York contributed to this report.