Several international media covered the event. During an interview with foreign journalists on 19 March 2014,
Luca Zaia,
President of Veneto and leading member of
Liga Veneta–
Lega Nord, announced that he too had voted (yes) in the online poll and explained that he would seek "total independence" for Veneto. On 1 April 2014, a committee of the
Regional Council of Veneto put forward bills calling for a referendum on independence and on more autonomy for the region. The move was supported by the representatives of Liga Veneta–Lega Nord,
Forza Italia (the minority faction),
New Centre-Right,
Popular Future,
Union of the Centre and
North-East Union, but opposed by the
Democratic Party,
Italy of Values and the
Federation of the Left. The day after, all the floor leaders of the parties represented in the council (except for the Federation of the Left) officially asked the Italian government to give Veneto the status of a
special-statute autonomous region and fiscal autonomy. The final document was approved by Liga Veneta–Lega Nord, Forza Italia (both factions), New Centre Right, Union of the Centre, Italy of Values and North-East Union. On 28 April, during a visit to Veneto, the Italian Minister of the Interior,
Angelino Alfano, acknowledged that "there is a Venetian question, which will be central in the government's relation with regions". In reference to what he called "Agenda Veneto", he said: "We think that Veneto could be the laboratory for a form of strong and advanced federalism. [...] We cannot close our eyes in front of independentist risings. [...] The answer is dual: enhancing autonomy and improving the government's services". For his part, Zaia explained to Alfano the "legitimate request of Venetians" for autonomy and independence, and that "the issue of autonomy and the desire of independence of Venetians cannot be resolved with an aspirin", concluding that "if Rome continues to sleep, it is inevitable that Veneto will organise by itself". On 10 June the Regional Council discussed and passed a law concerning five referendum questions concerning special autonomy. On 12 June the same legislative assembly passed Valdegamberi's 342/2013 bill in order to hold a referendum on the independence (question: "Do you want Veneto to become a sovereign and independent republic?") with 30 yeas, 12 nays and 3 abstentions. On 26 June 2015 the
Constitutional Court ruled the independence referendum out as contrary to the
Constitution, but authorised one of the five autonomy referendums ("Do you want the Region of Veneto to be granted of further and special forms and conditions of autonomy?"). In March 2016 President Zaia announced that he had written to
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi in order to start negotiating both on the organisation of the referendum on autonomy and on the devolution of further powers to Veneto according to article 116 of the Constitution. Zaia proposed holding the referendum on the same day as the
2016 constitutional referendum (which would reduce the regions' powers—article 117, while expanding the powers that can be devolved to regions according to article 116 and creating a regionalised Senate), a notion deemed legally impossible by undersecretary
Gianclaudio Bressa, and the negotiations started in May. According to an opinion poll taken in June, 78.5% of Venetians would take part in an autonomy referendum, 78.4% would vote yes, 3.5% no and 18.1% did not know. According to the same poll, 70.7% of voters would participate also in the constitutional referendum, 41.3% would vote yes, 22.2% no and 36.5% did not know. Contextually, two bills calling for an independence referendum were introduced in the Regional Council, one by Liga Veneta's
Marino Finozzi,
Gabriele Michieletto,
Alessandro Montagnoli and
Luciano Sandonà, with the support of
Roberto Ciambetti (President of the Council), and the other by
Antonio Guadagnini. ==References==