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Italy Holds Referendum on Judicial System Reforms

Italy recently conducted a significant national referendum aimed at implementing comprehensive reforms to its judiciary system. The vote addressed five specific legal proposals, including changes to the rules governing preventive detention and the professional separation of judges and prosecutors. Proponents of the measures argued that the reforms are necessary to increase accountability and improve the efficiency of the country’s legal processes. However, the validity of the results depended on meeting a mandatory 50 percent voter turnout threshold, a requirement that historically poses a challenge for Italian referendums.

  • The referendum included five distinct questions designed to overhaul various mechanisms of the Italian justice system.
  • One key proposal sought to limit the use of preventive detention, which allows for the imprisonment of suspects before a trial.
  • Voters were asked to decide whether judges and prosecutors should be prohibited from switching between the two roles during their careers.
  • Another measure proposed allowing lawyers and academics to participate in the performance evaluations of magistrates.
  • Under Italian law, the referendum results are only legally binding if more than 50 percent of the eligible electorate casts a ballot.
  • The national vote was scheduled to take place alongside local administrative elections in approximately 1,000 municipalities across the country.

France 24 is an international television network and news website owned by the French state.

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Comments

2 responses to “Italy Holds Referendum on Judicial System Reforms”

  1. Italy is definitiv going backwards

  2. Fascist try to control everything and this is definitely a part of it and an independent judiciary is something that they hate the most

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