Italians are voting in a referendum to shorten the residency requirement for citizenship from ten to five years for non-EU foreigners, a proposal opposed by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s rightwing government. If approved, this change could enable about half of Italy’s 5.4 million foreign residents to apply for citizenship, aligning Italy’s immigration rules with those of Germany and France. However, low voter turnout is expected, as Meloni’s government encourages abstention, potentially preventing the referendum from reaching the required participation threshold for it to be binding.
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EU urged to exempt more companies from contentious supply chain law
The EU is facing pressure to simplify a controversial supply chain law aimed at addressing environmental and human rights abuses, as Swedish MEP Jörgen Warborn argues for reducing the number of companies subject to compliance. While the European Commission has proposed raising the employee threshold for compliance from 500 to 1,000, Warborn suggests increasing it to 3,000 and eliminating mandatory climate transition plans. Amidst divisions among member states, including calls from France and Germany to...
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