Italians begin voting in high-stakes justice referendum

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ROME, March 22 (Reuters) - Italians began voting on Sunday in a referendum to confirm a contested judicial reform put forward by Prime ​Minister Giorgia Meloni, a key test for her right-wing ‌coalition ahead of a general election due next year.

Voters must decide whether to back constitutional changes to separate the career paths of judges and public ​prosecutors – an issue that has long roiled domestic politics – and split ​Italy’s judicial self-governing body into two separate entities.

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The vote ⁠comes at the end of a heated campaign which pitted the ​Meloni-led ‘yes’ camp against centre-left opponents supporting the ‘no’. Polls close at 3 ​p.m. (1400 GMT) on Monday.

The opposition, led by the Democratic Party and the 5-Star Movement, has warned that the reform would undermine judicial independence and leave ​room for political interference, saying that would allow Meloni to ​tighten her grip on power.

The government rejects the criticism, arguing that reform is ‌needed ⁠to curb the politicised election of members at the self-ruling High Council of the Judiciary (CSM), after scandals exposed backroom deals over senior prosecutor appointments.

Analysts say Meloni would likely receive a major boost from ​a ‘yes’ win, as ​she grapples ⁠with the fallout from the Iran war and a stagnant economy near the end of her mandate.

A ​win for the centre-left – still trailing Meloni’s bloc ​in ⁠opinion polls – would strengthen its efforts to build an alliance capable of challenging the prime minister.

Polls published before a two-week pre-ballot blackout took ⁠effect ​showed the two camps neck-and-neck, amid suggestions ​that Meloni supporters may stay home as they were seen as relatively disengaged on ​the highly complex issue.

Reporting by Angelo Amante; Editing by Crispian Balmer

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