Ettore Rosato

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Ettore Rosato
File:Ettore Rosato 2015.jpg
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Assumed office
29 April 2008
Constituency Friuli-Venezia Giulia
In office
29 October 2003 – 27 April 2006
Constituency Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Personal details
Born (1968-07-28) 28 July 1968 (age 55)
Trieste, Italy
Political party DC (till 1994)
PPI (1994-2002)
The Daisy (2002-2007)
PD (2007-2019)
Italia Viva (since 2019)

Ettore Rosato (born 28 July 1968) is an Italian politician, member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies and leader of the Democratic Party in the Chamber.[1]

Political career

Ettore Rosato was born in Trieste in 1968. He started his interest in politics when he attended the lyceum.

During the late 1980s, he became a member of the centrist Christian Democracy (DC) and was elected city councilor in his hometown. When the DC was disbanded he later joined the Italian People's Party (PPI) and The Daisy (DL).

In 2003 he became a member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies; while in 2005 he run for the office of Mayor of Trieste at the head of a centre-left coalition, but he closely lost with the incumbent centre-right Mayor Roberto Dipiazza.

In 2007 he was among the founding fathers of the Democratic Party.

Rosato was re-elected in the Chamber of Deputies after the 2008 and 2013 general elections.

On 16 June 2015 he was elected Leader of the PD in the Chamber of Deputies with 239 votes out of 291, replacing Roberto Speranza.[2]

Italian electoral law of 2017

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In Autumn 2017, Rosato was the proposer of a new electoral law, which was named after him, Rosatellum bis.[3]

The Rosatellum bis is a parallel system, which act as a mixed system, with 36% of seats allocated using a first past the post electoral system and 64% using a proportional method, with one round of voting. The Senate and the Chamber of Deputies did not differ in the way they allocated the proportional seats, both using the D'Hondt method of allocating seats.[4][5]

The new electoral law was supported by the Democratic Party and his government ally Popular Alternative, but also by the opposition parties Forza Italia, Lega Nord and Liberal Popular Alliance.[6] Despite many protests from the Five Star Movement and the Democratic and Progressive Movement, the electoral law was approved on 12 October by the Chamber of Deputies with 375 votes in favor and 215 against,[7] and on 26 October by the Senate with 214 votes against 61.[8]

References