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comunali

Comunali is the Italian term used to describe matters related to a comune (municipality), including its administration, local government, and elections. The word is most commonly encountered in reference to municipal elections, known as elezioni comunali, which decide the mayor and the municipal council of a town or city.

In the Italian system, the mayor (sindaco) is elected by a two-round process. If a candidate receives

A majority bonus is typically applied to the coalition supporting the elected mayor to help ensure stable

Beyond elections, comunali also covers the ongoing functions of local government, such as the council’s deliberations

In common usage, comunali can refer to the plural scope of municipalities or to issues and events

more
than
50
percent
of
valid
votes
in
the
first
round,
they
are
elected
outright.
If
no
candidate
reaches
that
threshold,
the
top
two
candidates
advance
to
a
second
round
(ballottaggio)
held
a
few
weeks
later.
The
municipal
council
(consiglio
comunale)
is
elected
through
proportional
representation
based
on
party
lists,
with
the
aim
of
reflecting
the
voters’
preferences
across
the
municipality.
governance,
though
the
exact
allocation
of
seats
depends
on
the
municipality’s
size
and
local
rules.
The
number
of
council
seats
varies
with
population,
ranging
from
a
small
council
in
tiny
comunes
to
hundreds
in
large
cities.
and
the
executive
activities
of
the
giunta
comunale
(municipal
executive).
The
terms
comunale
and
comune
are
closely
tied
to
local
autonomy,
urban
planning,
public
services,
and
community
administration.
tied
to
local
government
across
Italy.
It
is
used
in
official
and
media
language
to
denote
matters
pertaining
to
local
governance
and
elections.