2013 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership election

The 2013 Democratic Party leadership election was an open primary election held in November–December 2013. After having come first in the vote by party members, Matteo Renzi was elected by a landslide 68% in a three-way primary on 8 December.[1]

2013 Democratic Party leadership election
← 2009 8 December 2013 2017 →
 
Nominee Matteo Renzi Gianni Cuperlo Pippo Civati
Delegate count 657 194 149
Popular vote 1,895,332 510,970 399,473
Percentage 67.6% 18.2% 14.2%

Primary election results map. Azure denotes provinces with a Renzi plurality and Red denotes those with a Cuperlo plurality.

Secretary before election

Guglielmo Epifani

Elected Secretary

Matteo Renzi

Electoral process edit

Candidates were required to file their candidacies by 11 October 2013.[2][3]

Between 14 October and 6 November local and provincial conventions took place all around the country. Between 7 and 17 November party members voted on the candidates for secretary. Under party rules the candidates who receive the support of at least the 15% of voting party members in local conventions or the three most voted candidates with at least 5% of the vote, qualify for the second round of the race and have the chance to present their platform at the national convention.

The national convention, which took place on 24–25 November, declared the candidates who will run in an open primary on 8 December. Voters will elect also the national assembly of the party and the regional secretaries and assemblies. If no candidate got more than 50% of the vote, a run-off between the two most voted candidates would take place in the national assembly, scheduled within two weeks from the primary election.

Candidates edit

Four individuals filed their candidacy for becoming secretary of the party:

Opinion polls edit

Institute
Date Civati Cuperlo Pittella Renzi Other
IPR 2 September 2013 5.0% 14.0% 3.0% 78.0% 0.0%
Epoké 20 September 2013 20.2% 13.2% 51.1% 15.5%
SWG 27 September 2013 4.0% 9.0% 3.0% 55.0% 29.0%
IPR 15 October 2013 17.0% 10.0% 10.0% 63.0% 0.0%
Demopolis 28 October 2013 10.0% 22.0% 3.0% 65.0% 0.0%
IPR 28 October 2013 13.0% 18.0% 4.0% 65.0% 0.0%
Quorum 11 November 2013 12.3% 14.5% 0.7% 72.5% 0.0%
Ispo 15 November 2013 7.0% 14.0% 1.0% 72.0% 6.0%
Quorum 18 November 2013 11.3% 16.4% 2.5% 69.8% 0.0%
Ixè 22 November 2013 12.0% 19.0% 58.0% 11.0%
TecnèI 25 November 2013 8.5% 38.1% 46.1% 7.3%
TecnèII 25 November 2013 7.4% 34.3% 46.2% 12.1%
TecnèIII 25 November 2013 5.3% 32.1% 49.1% 13.5%
TecnèIV 25 November 2013 3.9% 29.1% 52.9% 14.1%
Quorum 25 November 2013 12.6% 17.4% 70.0% 0.0%
Ixè 29 November 2013 13.0% 23.0% 56.0% 8.0%
Quorum 1 December 2013 12.7% 20.7% 66.6% 0.0%
TecnèV 5 December 2013 10.1% 32.6% 52.2% 5.1%
TecnèVI 5 December 2013 8.8% 29.5% 53.0% 8.7%
TecnèVII 5 December 2013 8.1% 27.7% 54.9% 9.3%
TecnèVIII 5 December 2013 7.3% 26.0% 56.0% 10.7%
Ixè 6 December 2013 14.0% 21.0% 59.0% 6.0%
I: Turnout 1,1 million

II: Turnout 1,9 million
III: Turnout 2,6 million

IV: Turnout 3,2 million
V: Turnout 0,9 million

VI: Turnout 1,4 million
VII: Turnout 1,8 million

VIII: Turnout 2,1 million

Results edit

Vote by party members edit

Candidate Votes %
Matteo Renzi 133,892 45.34
Gianni Cuperlo 116,454 39.44
Pippo Civati 27,841 9.43
Gianni Pittella 17,117 5.80
Total 295,304 100.0

Source: Official results

Renzi, Cuperlo and Civati were admitted to the primary election, while Pittella was excluded.

Vote by party members
Renzi
45.34%
Cuperlo
39.44%
Civati
9.43%
Pittella
5.80%

Primary election edit

Candidate Votes % Delegates
Matteo Renzi 1,895,332 67.55 657
Gianni Cuperlo 510,970 18.21 194
Pippo Civati 399,473 14.24 149
Total 2,805,775 100.0 1,000

Source: Semi-official results

Popular vote
Renzi
67.55%
Cuperlo
18.21%
Civati
14.24%

Delegates summary edit

Portrait Name Logo Delegates
 
 
657/1000 (66%)





 
 
194/1000 (19%)





 
 
149/1000 (15%)





Results by Regions edit

Renzi won an absolute majority in all regions. Only among voters living abroad he won merely a plurality (47.1%). His strongest performances were in his homeregion Tuscany (78.4%) and neighbouring Marche (76.3%) and Umbria (74.5%), the weakest in Sardinia (56.0%). Cuperlo performed strongest in the southern regions of Calabria (34.2%) and Basilicata (33.7%), and weakest in Marche (10.7%). Civati had his strongest results among expatriates (22.3%), in Aosta Valley (20.7%), Trentino (20.5%) and Sardinia (19.6%), the weakest in the southern region of Basilicata (8.0%).

Generally speaking, Renzi and Civati did better in centralnorthern Italy, Cuperlo in the South.

Region Renzi Cuperlo Civati
Abruzzo 67.4 20.0 12.6
Aosta Valley 63.5 15.2 21.3
Apulia 58.2 25.9 15.9
Basilicata 57.2 34.7 8.1
Calabria 57.8 33.7 8.6
Campania 62.3 28.7 9.1
Emilia-Romagna 71.1 15.0 13.9
Friuli-Venezia Giulia 66.2 17.5 16.4
Lazio 63.7 19.5 16.8
Liguria 62.0 19.4 18.6
Lombardy 66.0 15.1 18.9
Marche 76.0 10.8 13.2
Molise 63.4 28.4 8.2
Piedmont 68.8 15.2 16.0
Sardinia 56.4 23.8 19.8
Sicily 60.1 28.1 11.8
Trentino-Alto Adige 66.3 13.5 20.2
Tuscany 78.5 11.5 10.0
Umbria 75.4 14.6 10.0
Veneto 69.2 14.5 16.3

References edit

  1. ^ "Primarie PD 2013". Primarie PD 2013.
  2. ^ "Regolamenti Congresso PD 2013 | Congresso 2013 | Partito Democratico". Archived from the original on 2013-10-20. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
  3. ^ "Al via il percorso congressuale, ecco l'ordine di lista dei candidati | Partito Democratico". Archived from the original on 2013-10-18. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  4. ^ "Pippo Civati: «Io non ho paura» - Left". Archived from the original on 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  5. ^ "Provincia di MB - Ponti: "La Brianza volta pagina"".
  6. ^ "Pd, Civati si candida: "Dialogo con 5 Stelle. Vendicheremo Prodi e Rodotà"". 7 July 2013.
  7. ^ a b c "Archivio Corriere della Sera". archivio.corriere.it.
  8. ^ "Archivio Corriere della Sera".
  9. ^ "Socialisti e Democratici". Archived from the original on 2013-10-15. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  10. ^ "Archivio Corriere della Sera".
  11. ^ "Archivi Blog". Linkiesta.it.
  12. ^ "Profile: Florence mayor Matteo Renzi", BBC, June 2015
  13. ^ "Archivio Corriere della Sera".
  14. ^ "Archivio Corriere della Sera".

External links edit