Direct Democracy and the Prohibition of the Binding Mandate: The Italian Debate

16 Pages Posted: 15 Apr 2014 Last revised: 27 May 2014

See all articles by Elena Falletti

Elena Falletti

Carlo Cattaneo - LIUC University

Date Written: April 14, 2014

Abstract

One of the most controversial topics of the current political debate in Italy is about the prohibition of the binding mandate previewed by art. 67 of the Italian Constitution. In a context of collective distrust in politics and in the administration of public affairs, a new party, the Movimento Cinque Stelle, (hereinafter, M5S), has exploded collecting 25% of votes. One of the points of the M5S' program was the claim that its MPs are only spokepersons of the voters, without any autonomy from them. One of the campaign promises was that they would submitted bills to be deposited in Parliament to public judgment through the use of an online platform. To participate in these debates, Italian citizens have to register to the online platform with a scanned copy of their ID document. However, this online platform is not neutral, because it belongs to Beppe Grillo's blog. Beppe Grillo is the founder and the political leader of M5S, but he did not run in the political campaign. This circumstance presents problems of net neutrality, privacy and use of participants' personal data. Beppe Grillo's staff declared that the platform has around 90,000 certified subscribers, whilst the M5S' electors number almost 9 million. This is a huge element of controversy: can a minority be involved in the MPs' commitment, when each MP represents the whole Nation? Furthermore, political debate among M5S' supporters, critics, and MPs has been developed on social network such as Facebook and Twitter, especially on political representatives' personal pages. This phenomenon is connected with the advent of the Internet in political participation and the purpose of this paper is to understand how to balance the contribution of the direct participation of the electorate with the prohibition of binding parliamentary mandate present in the Italian Constitution.

Keywords: prohibition of binding mandate

JEL Classification: K19

Suggested Citation

Falletti, Elena, Direct Democracy and the Prohibition of the Binding Mandate: The Italian Debate (April 14, 2014). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2424685 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2424685

Elena Falletti (Contact Author)

Carlo Cattaneo - LIUC University ( email )

Corso Matteotti 22
Castellanza, Varese 21053
Italy

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