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Meloni government’s longevity stems from multiple stabilizing mechanisms

A formal parliamentary assembly hall with curved rows of empty red seats arranged in a semicircular theater-style configuration, ornate wooden paneling and architectural details, elegant grid-patterned ceiling with recessed lighting, and a raised speaker's platform, photographed in landscape orientation.
Research area:Social SciencesPolitical Science and International RelationsPolitical Systems and Governance

What the study found: The study finds that the Meloni government’s unusual longevity can be explained by the convergence of multiple stabilizing mechanisms that rarely align together in Italy. The author presents this as a paradoxical case because the government is stable despite operating under the same institutional constraints that have often produced short-lived Italian cabinets.
Why the authors say this matters: The authors suggest this case matters because Italy’s most durable government in decades is promoting a constitutional reform meant to increase stability, even though the study says cohesive and disciplined coalitions can already achieve stability without changing institutional rules.
What the researchers tested: The study traces potential stabilizing mechanisms across all stages of the coalition life-cycle framework, using the Meloni government as a deviant case. The abstract does not provide additional methodological detail.
What worked and what didn't: The abstract says stability resulted from multiple stabilizing mechanisms operating together across the coalition life cycle. It also says such mechanisms have seldom aligned simultaneously in the Italian context, and that the reform agenda highlights a contrast between achieved stability and proposed institutional change.
What to keep in mind: The summary is limited to the abstract, which does not describe specific data, measures, or comparative cases. It also does not spell out which stabilizing mechanisms were examined in detail.

Key points

  • The Meloni government is described as unusually long-lived in the Italian context.
  • Its stability is attributed to multiple stabilizing mechanisms converging at once.
  • The study says these mechanisms seldom align simultaneously in Italy.
  • The authors note a paradox: a stable government is backing a constitutional reform to increase stability.
  • The abstract does not give detailed methods, data, or named stabilizing mechanisms.

Disclosure

Research title:
Meloni government’s longevity stems from multiple stabilizing mechanisms
Authors:
Marco Improta
Institutions:
University of Siena
Publication date:
2026-03-05
OpenAlex record:
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AI provenance: This post was generated by OpenAI. The original authors did not write or review this post.