Italian local elections, 2014

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The 2014 Italian local elections were held on 25 May, with a second round on 8 June. In Italy, direct elections were held in 4086 comuni: in each comune were chosen mayor and members of the City Council. Of the 4086 comuni, 29 were capoluoghi and 243 had a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants (10,000 for Sicily). [1]

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Italy, officially the Italian Republic, is a country in Southern Europe. Located in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea, Italy shares open land borders with France, Switzerland, Austria, Slovenia and the enclaved microstates San Marino and Vatican City. Italy covers an area of 301,340 km2 (116,350 sq mi) and has a largely temperate seasonal and Mediterranean climate. With around 61 million inhabitants, it is the fourth-most populous EU member state and the most populous country in Southern Europe.

<i>Comune</i> third-level administrative divisions of the Italian Republic

The comune is a basic administrative division in Italy, roughly equivalent to a township or municipality.

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Contents

Municipal councilors and mayors ordinarily serve a terms of five years.

Voting System

All mayoral elections in Italy in cities with a population higher than 15,000 use the same system. Under this 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 after two weeks. The coalition of the elected mayor is guaranteed a majority of seats in the council with the attribution of extra seats.

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. In case of two preferences, they must be given to candidates of both genders. Seats are the attributed to parties proportionally, and for each party the candidates with the highest number of preferences are elected.

Results

Majority of each coalition in 243 comuni which have a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants:

PartyPolitical leaningComuni
Centre-left coalition Centre-left 164
Centre-right coalition Centre-right 41
Five Star Movement Big tent [2] 3
Independents and othersnone35

Party Votes

Party votes in 29 capoluoghi:

PartyVotes
Democratic Party 737,879
Five Star Movement 202,795
Forza Italia 187,238
Left Ecology Freedom 48,597
Brothers of Italy 45,989
New Centre-Right 33,388
Lega Nord 31,401

Mayoral results

CitiesPopulationIncumbent mayor Party Elected mayor Party
Pescara 116,398Luigi Albore Mascia Centre-right Marco Alessandrini Centre-left
Teramo 54,582Maurizio Brucchi Centre-right Maurizio Brucchi Centre-right
Potenza 66,072Vito Santarsiero Centre-left Dario De Luca Right-wing
Cesena 97,100Paolo Lucchi Centre-left Paolo Lucchi Centre-left
Ferrara 135,168Tiziano Tagliani Centre-left Tiziano Tagliani Centre-left
Forlì 116,403Roberto Balzani Centre-left Davide Dei Centre-left
Modena 179,087Giorgio Pighi Centre-left Giancarlo Muzzarelli Centre-left
Reggio Emilia 168,883 Graziano Delrio Centre-left Luca Vecchi Centre-left
Bergamo 118,786Franco Tentorio Centre-right Giorgio Gori Centre-left
Cremona 71,184Oreste Perri Centre-right Gianluca Galimberti Centre-left
Pavia 71,345Alessandro Cattaneo Centre-right Massimo Depaoli Centre-left
Pesaro 94,705Luca Ceriscioli Centre-left Matteo Ricci Centre-left
Urbino 15,321Franco Corbucci Centre-left Maurizio Gambini Centre-right
Campobasso 48,436Luigi Di Bartolomeo Centre-right Antonio Battista Centre-left
Biella 43,672Donato Gentile Centre-right Marco Cavicchioli Centre-left
Verbania 30,313Marco Zacchera Centre-right Silvia Marchionini Centre-left
Vercelli 46,992Andrea Corsaro Centre-right Maura Forte Centre-left
Bari 322,751 Michele Emiliano Centre-left Antonio Decaro Centre-left
Foggia 153,143Gianni Mongelli Centre-left Franco Landella Centre-right
Sassari 127,743Gianfranco Ganau Centre-left Michele Sanna Centre-left
Caltanissetta 63,034Michele Campisi Centre-right Giovanni Ruvolo Centre-left
Florence 370,545 Matteo Renzi Centre-left Dario Nardella Centre-left
Livorno 160,512Alessandro Cosimi Centre-left Filippo Nogarin Five Star
Prato 187,159Roberto Cenni Centre-right Matteo Biffoni Centre-left
Perugia 166,003Wladimiro Boccali Centre-left Andrea Romizi Centre-right
Terni 112,227Leopoldo Di Girolamo Centre-left Leopoldo Di Girolamo Centre-left
Padua 209,678 Flavio Zanonato Centre-left Massimo Bitonci Centre-right

City councils

City PD FI LN SEL M5S FdI NCD Others
Pescara 144022025
Teramo 530010416
Potenza 1310002013
Cesena 152004012
Ferrara 183114101
Forlì 184003102
Modena 192014001
Reggio Emilia 192015001
Bergamo 176211102
Cremona 197110010
Pavia 208100010
Ascoli Piceno 460012114
Pesaro 213004011
Urbino 42000005
Campobasso 910030010
Biella 205101101
Verbania 193111012
Vercelli 146101001
Bari 168031123
Foggia 380001511
Sassari 193013005
Caltanissetta 1330020210
Florence 244013001
Livorno 600020002
Prato 208002000
Perugia 812002331
Terni 194014100
Padua 741301003

Results in the capital cities

Florence

Incumbent mayor: Matteo Renzi (PD)

CandidateCoalitionFirst round
Votes%
Dario Nardella PD 111,04959.15
Marco Stella FI-others22,64512.06
Miriam Amato M5S 17,5259.33
Tommaso Grassi SEL-PRC 15,4108.20
Cristina ScalettiCivic Lists8,3854.46
Achille Totaro FdI 6,4653.44
Gianna Scatizzi NCD-UDC 4,1022.18
Others-2,1291.12
Eligible voters288,971100,00
Did not vote94,72632.79
Voted194,24567.21
Blank or invalid ballots2,4451.25
Total valid votes187,71096.66

Bari

Incumbent mayor: Michele Emiliano (PD)

CandidateCoalitionFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Antonio Decaro PD-RI-SEL-CD-others88,37149.3864,41765.40
Domenico Di Paola FI-NCD-FDI-others64,00435.7634,09634.60
Sabino Mangano M5S 13,6537.62
Desirèe DigeronimoCivic Lists5,6993.16
Luigi PaccioneCivic List2,6691.49
Stefano MinielloCivic List1,8051.00
Others-2,7781.54
Eligible voters279,803100.00279,803100.00
Did not vote90,77632.45178,64263.85
Voted189,02767.55101,16136.15
Blank or invalid ballots3,7281.978510.84
Total valid votes178,94994.6898,55397.43

Notes

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-07-15. Retrieved 2014-07-13.
  2. M5S is considered populist, anti-corruption, environmentalist and Eurosceptic.

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