Italy adopts new electoral law ahead of 2018 vote

Leaders of the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) Beppe Grillo (L) and Alessandro Di Battista (R) cover their eyes with a white scarf during a protest near the Pantheon against the government’s decision to vote a bill for a new electoral law (known as “Rosatellum”) to a confidence vote in Rome on October 25, 2017. / AFP / Alberto Pizzoli/

ROME, Italy (AFP) – The Italian government adopted a new electoral law Thursday that is set to favor mainstream parties over the populist Five Star Movement (M5S) at general elections expected next year.

The new law, which looks likely to land Italy with yet another coalition government at the national elections due between March and May, was adopted by the Senate by 214 votes in favor to 61 against.

Furious M5S members have protested from parliament benches and in the piazzas of central Rome this week.

As individual parties, the ruling centre-left Democratic Party (PD) and anti-establishment M5S are currently running neck-and-neck in the polls, with the center-right Go Italy (FI) and anti-immigrant Northern League dragging their feet.

But polls indicate that no single party would snap up enough ballots under the new system, a combination of proportional representation and first-past-the-post, without forming a coalition.

While a divided left may flounder, a FI and League partnership is expected to leapfrog into first place.

The M5S on the other hand, which has vowed never to join forces with traditional parties, would be out of the race.

The new system had the backing of the PD, FI, League and the small center-right Popular Area (AP).(Agence France-Presse)