The so called “Italian transition” of the 1990s has a profound impact on Parliament, albeit often of a quite unexpected kind. Many external changes forced it to modify its role and performance, but as usually happens when a well-established institution is under strain, Parliament tried to resist by adapting in order to maintain its specific, historically-rooted patterns of behaviour and internal principles. The chief prize at stake has been Parliament’s central institutionalised role within the political system, and its formal and substantial prerogatives in the legislative process. The political trend urged the parliamentary institution to adjust to the much-invoked bi-polar dynamics, which basically meant the acceptance of the centrality...