2017 Italian local elections

The 2017 Italian local elections were held on Sunday 11 June. If necessary, a run-off vote was held on Sunday 25 June.[1] The term of mayors and councils will last five years, unless an early election is triggered.[2]

In the autonomous regions of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol and Aosta Valley the elections will be held on 7 May.[3][4]

The elections were characterized by a good performance of the centre-right coalition and many losses for the centre-left coalition, which however won in the majority of municipalities with more than 15,000 inhabitants, but lost in the most important cities like Genoa, L'Aquila and Parma;[5] while the Five Star Movement was excluded from the runoffs in all the most important cities.[6][7][8] In Lecce, the result was an anatra zoppa situation, as the centre-left candidate was elected mayor, but the centre-right coalition won a majority of seats on the city council.[9][10]

Voting system

Every municipality with more than 15,000 inhabitants elects its mayor and city council with the same system.

Voters express a direct choice for the mayor or an indirect choice voting for one of the parties of the candidate's coalition. If no candidate receives a majority of votes, the top two candidates go to a second round two weeks later. The coalition of the elected mayor is guaranteed a majority of seats in the council with the attribution of extra seats, unless an anatra zoppa situation occurs. If the Mayor resigns, dies, lose a motion of confidence, or a majority of the municipal councillors step down at the same time, an early election (for the Mayor and for all municipal councillors) is called.

The City Council is elected at the same time as the mayor. Voters can vote for a list of candidates and can express up to two preferences for candidates of said list, provided they are selecting candidates of both genders. Seats are then attributed to parties proportionally, and for each party the candidates with the highest number of preferences are elected. However, if in a first round, no candidate received a majority of the votes, but the lists supporting a candidate different than the runoff winner won a majority of votes; or if a mayor was elected in first round, but the lists supporting them did not receive 40% of the votes, the coalition supporting the mayor will not receive a majority of seats in the council. That is called an anatra zoppa situation.

The municipalities with a population of less than 15,000 elect their mayors with a plurality system. A mayoral candidate can be supported by only one list, and the list of the elected mayor gets a two-thirds majority of seats. Voters can express up to two preferences for candidates of the chosen list, provided they are selecting candidates of both genders. Seats are then attributed to the candidates with the highest number of preferences.

Results

Overall results

Majority of each coalition in 161 municipalities (comuni) with a population higher than 15,000:[11]

CoalitionComuni
Centre-left coalition67
Centre-right coalition59
Civic lists20
Five Star Movement8
Left-wing coalition2

Notes: almost all political parties and coalitions in local (municipal and regional) elections usually run with the support of some minor allied list active in local politics forming coalitions under the same nominee as the mayoral candidate, only M5S ran in all elections with a single list (that is the list of M5S under the M5S nominee as the mayoral candidate without forming coalitions with minor local lists or other national parties).

By party

Party votes in the main municipalities:[12]

Party%
Democratic Party15.6%
Five Star Movement8.7%
Forza Italia6.8%
Northern League6.7%
Italian Left6.5%
Brothers of Italy2.5%
By coalition

Coalition votes in the main municipalities:

Coalition%
Centre-left coalition37.2%
Centre-right coalition34.4%
Five Star Movement9.4%
Left-wing coalition7.0%

Mayoral election results

  Prefectural commissioner
RegionCityPopulationIncumbent mayorElected mayor1st round2nd roundSeatsSource
Votes%Votes%
PiedmontAlessandria93,894Maria Rita Rossa (PD)Gianfranco Cuttica di Revigliasco (LN)12,14430.25%18,76255.68%
20 / 32
[1]
Asti76,048Fabrizio Brignolo (PD)Maurizio Rasero (FI)15,86847.62%13,21854.90%
20 / 32
[2]
Cuneo56,051Federico Borgna (Ind.)Federico Borgna (Ind.)15,40059.65%
21 / 32
[3]
LombardyComo84,495Mario Lucini (PD)Mario Landriscina (Ind.)11,82634.77%13,04552.68%
20 / 32
[4]
Lodi44,945Mariano Savastano[13]Sara Casanova (LN)5,52327.32%9,85956.90%
19 / 32
[5]
Monza122,849Roberto Scanagatti (PD)Dario Allevi (FI)19,34439.84%21,86951.33%
20 / 32
[6]
VenetoBelluno35,870Jacopo Massaro (Ind.)Jacopo Massaro (Ind.)7,55546.19%8,51163.15%
20 / 32
[7]
Padua211,215Paolo De Biagi[14]Sergio Giordani (PD)28,59329.20%47,88851.84%
19 / 32
[8]
Verona258,274Flavio Tosi (F!)Federico Sboarina (Ind.)33,44029.13%46,96258.11%
22 / 36
[9]
Friuli-Venezia GiuliaGorizia34,844Ettore Romoli (FI)Rodolfo Ziberna (FI)8,54349.88%7,77459.79%
24 / 40
[10]
LiguriaGenoa585,407Marco Doria (Ind.)Marco Bucci (Ind.)88,78138.80%112,39855.24%
24 / 40
[11]
La Spezia116,456Massimo Federici (PD)Pierluigi Peracchini (Ind.)13,18732.61%20,63659.98%
19 / 32
[12]
Emilia-RomagnaParma194,001Federico Pizzarotti (M5S)Federico Pizzarotti (Ind.)26,49634.78%37,15757.87%
20 / 32
[13]
Piacenza102,191Paolo Dosi (PD)Patrizia Barbieri (Ind.)14,62534.78%20,50058.54%
20 / 32
[14]
TuscanyLucca89,781Alessandro Tambellini (PD)Alessandro Tambellini (PD)13,92237.48%17,45350.52%
20 / 32
[15]
Pistoia90,315Samuele Bertinelli (PD)Alessandro Tomasi (FdI)10,43526.68%19,04954.28%
20 / 32
[16]
LazioFrosinone46,323Nicola Ottaviani (FI)Nicola Ottaviani (FI)15,03856.38%
20 / 32
[17]
Rieti47,698Simone Petrangeli (SEL)Antonio Cicchetti (FI)13,13847.29%12,66050.20%
20 / 32
[18]
AbruzzoL'Aquila69,627Massimo Cialente (PD)Pierluigi Biondi (FdI)14,14235.84%16,41053.52%
20 / 32
[19]
ApuliaLecce94,916Paolo Perrone (CoR)Carlo Salvemini (Ind.)15,24328.90%22,05054.76%
14 / 32
[20]
Taranto200,461Ippazio Stefano (SEL)Rinaldo Melucci (PD)16,79917.92%26,91350.91%
20 / 32
[21]
CalabriaCatanzaro90,612Sergio Abramo (FI)Sergio Abramo (FI)21,05539.72%21,96364.39%
20 / 32
[22]
SicilyPalermo671,696Leoluca Orlando (Ind.)Leoluca Orlando (Ind.)125,91346.28%
24 / 40
[23]
Trapani68,759Vito Damiano (Ind.)Francesco Messineo[15][24]
SardiniaOristano31,630Guido Tendas (PD)Andrea Lutzu (FI)4,95529.60%7,82265.29%
15 / 24
[25]

References

  1. ^ "Al voto l'11 giugno per le elezioni amministrative - Ministero dell'Interno". www.interno.gov.it. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  2. ^ "*** NORMATTIVA ***". www.normattiva.it. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  3. ^ Adige, Coordinamento e realizzazione informatica a cura dell’Ufficio Organizzazione e Informatica della Regione Autonoma Trentino-Alto. "Notizia". www.regione.taa.it (in Italian). Archived from the original on 2017-03-12. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  4. ^ "Arnad - Issime - Valsavarenche 07 maggio 2017 - Regione Autonoma Valle d'Aosta". www.regione.vda.it. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  5. ^ Comunali 2017, centrodestra conquista Genova e L'Aquila. Renzi: "Poteva andare meglio"
  6. ^ "5Stars suffer setback in Italy's local elections". 11 June 2017. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  7. ^ "Elezioni comunali, delusione M5s: fuori da capoluoghi di Regione e grandi città". 11 June 2017. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  8. ^ "Cinque Stelle fuori dai ballottaggi nelle grandi città, ecco i risultati". LaStampa.it. 12 June 2017. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  9. ^ "Eligendo Archivio - Ministero dell'Interno DAIT". Eligendo (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-06-13.
  10. ^ "Lecce, sindaco Carlo Salvemini si dimette: era "anatra zoppa" dopo una sentenza del Consiglio di Stato". Il Fatto Quotidiano (in Italian). 2019-01-07. Retrieved 2025-06-13.
  11. ^ Twitter – YouTrend
  12. ^ "Amministrative 2017: il bilancio del primo turno". www.youtrend.it. 13 June 2017. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  13. ^ Prefectural commissioner replacing mayor Simone Uggetti (PD) since 22 August 2016.
  14. ^ Prefectural commissioner replacing mayor Massimo Bitonci (LN) since February 2017
  15. ^ The centre-right candidate withdrawn from the second round because he was under investigation for corruption. However to be elected, the centre-left candidate needed at least a 50% of the turnout, but only 26.75% of the electors voted, so a Prefectural commissioner was appointed.
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