One month after the oath at the Quirinale, 42% of Italians express a positive evaluation of the first 30 days of the Meloni Government; negative is the opinion of 38% of Italians, while a fifth of the population still believes it is too early to express an opinion. The figure emerges from the survey conducted by the Demopolis Institute for the Italian TV program “Otto e mezzo”. A growing 48% is instead the figure on trust in Giorgia Meloni: the positive opinion of Italians on the Prime Minister is 6 points higher than the overall assessment of the Executive branch. Trust in Meloni differs significantly according to the political position of the citizens: 96% are represented by those who vote for Fratelli d'Italia. Three out of four are the voters of Lega and 65% of Berlusconi's party supporters trust the Premier. The opinions seem extremely polarized: a quarter of those who vote for Azione and just 7-8% of the voters of the Democratic Party and Five Star Movement trust the Premier. The Political Barometer of the Demopolis Institute also analyzed the repercussions on the weight and trend of the parties about 2 months after the last elections: Fratelli d’Italia would confirm itself largely first party with 29%, gaining 3 points compared to September 25. The M5S, with 17.4% and an increase of almost 2 points, would surpass the Democratic Party, now down and standing at 16.5%. Lega (8.7%) and Azione (7.6%) are in fact stable; Forza Italia (7.3%) loses almost a point, while Italian Left and Verdi are confirmed at 3.5%. The Demopolis Institute led by Pietro Vento finally analyzed the strength of today's coalitions: the majority of government (FdI, Lega and FI) would get 45%, 2 points more than on September 25. Similarly, but in a totally fragmented situation, it would be the electoral weight of the 3 parliamentary oppositions: 20% for the Centre-Left (Democratic Party, Italian Left and Verdi), 17.4% for Conte’s M5S, 7.6% for the Calenda’s Third Pole list.
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