Mayor of Rome

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Mayor of Rome
Sindaco di Roma
Insigne Romanum coronatum.svg
Seat Palazzo Senatorio
AppointerElectorate of Rome
Term length 5 years, renewable once
Inaugural holder Francesco Rospigliosi Pallavicini
Formation23 September 1870
DeputySilvia Scozzese
Salary€10,000 monthly
Website

The mayor of Rome (Italian : sindaco di Roma) is an elected politician who, along with the Rome City Council (Italian : Assemblea Capitolina) of 48 members, is accountable for the strategic government of Rome. As Rome is a comune speciale since 2009, the office is different from the offices of the other Italian cities. The title is the equivalent of Lord Mayor in the meaning of an actual executive leader.

Contents

Overview

Current seat of the Mayor, Palazzo Senatorio on Capitoline Hill. Piazza del Campidoglio, Rome - 2498.jpg
Current seat of the Mayor, Palazzo Senatorio on Capitoline Hill.

According to the City of Rome Statutes, the Mayor of Rome is a member of the Rome City Council (Italian : Assemblea Capitolina) ex-oficio as its overall head.

The Mayor is elected by the population of Rome. Citizens elect also the members of the City Council, which also controls the mayor's policy guidelines and is able to enforce the mayor's resignation by a motion of no confidence. The mayor is entitled to appoint and release the members of the Council, which are twelve (Italian : Assessori delle Giunta Capitolina) according to the Italian Constitution.

The seat of the City Council is the city hall Palazzo Senatorio on the Capitoline Hill.

History

When the City of Rome was founded, it was initially ruled by Kings. After the last King was overthrown, it would be ruled by Consuls who were elected by the Assembly of the Centuries. The Assembly of the Centuries was an extremely oligarchic voting system, with voters organized into blocks based on wealth, and each block having but one vote to elect the Consuls.

There were two Consuls at a time, known as the Consul Priori and the Consul Posteriori, and they served a 1-year term. Technically the Consul Priori was in charge of the city as well as the larger Roman Republic, and the Consul Posteriori was his second-in-command, but in practice both Consuls shared power except in times of national emergency. (Said emergencies would lead to either Senatus Consultum Ultimum, or failing that the true last resort was a Dictatorship, to be held by the Consul Priori.)

Roman Emperors were essentially Mayors of Rome ex officio, although the Consuls continued to exist in a largely ceremonial role. The Assembly of the Centuries was abolished, and the power to elect Consuls was transferred to the Senate alone. Once the Western Roman Empire ended, Consuls retook charge of the city, even as Kings once again ruled larger territories that included Rome. By this time there were no longer two Consuls in Rome, but one, the position of Consul Posteriori having been ceded to the younger Eastern Roman Empire.

In 534, a man named Decius Paulinus served as the very last Consul of Rome. (The last Consul was Byzantine Emperor Leo VI, but he did not rule from Rome.) The Senate survived as a city council of sorts, until it passed its final acts and voted to disband in 603. All the while, law and order were largely kept by various foreign occupiers (and their appointed city-governors).

In 756, the Donation of Pepin made Rome the capital of a newly formed Federation of the Papal States. After this, the city would be directly ruled by the same Popes who also ruled the much larger Papal States territory. During the final third or so of its existence, the Papal States also had a Governor of Rome, appointed by the Pope to rule the city in his name, allowing the Pope himself to focus on national and ecclesial matters.

Having been the capital of the Papal States, Rome did not receive its modern Mayor until 1870, when it became the capital of the Kingdom of Italy. The new Mayor served as a member of the city council, and he was appointed every three years by the King of Italy. Then since 1889 the Mayor was elected every four years by the City Council. However, the fascist dictatorship abolished mayors and City councils in 1926, replacing them with a single authoritarian Rector (Podestà) chosen by the National Fascist Party. The rector of Rome was called "Governatore" (Governor).

After World War II, the Mayor was chosen by the City Council. In 1993, the election of the Mayor was transferred from the City Council to direct election by the people. In 2001, the schedule of such elections was changed from every 4 years to every 5 years.

List of Mayors of Rome

Papal States (1558–1870)

From 1558 to 1870, the Papal States created the office of Governatore (Governor), also called Vice Camerlengo, chosen by the Pope.

Kingdom of Italy (1870–1946)

From 1870, when Rome was annexed, the Kingdom of Italy created the office of the Mayor of Rome (Sindaco di Roma), chosen by the City council. In 1926, the Fascist dictatorship abolished mayors and City councils, replacing them with a single authoritarian Governatore (Governor) chosen by the National Fascist Party.

 MayorTerm startTerm endParty
Michelangelo Caetani [1] 23 September 187030 September 1870 Independent
Giuseppe Lunati [2] 29 November 187020 December 1870 Independent
Filippo Doria Pamphili [2] 21 December 1870March 1871 Independent
Giovanni Angelini [2] March 187116 April 1871 Independent
1 Francesco Rospigliosi Pallavicini 16 April 187121 October 1871 Independent
2 Luigi Pianciani 29 July 18735 August 1874 Left
3 Pietro Venturi 15 January 18757 November 1877 Left
4 Emanuele Ruspoli 18 July 187820 July 1880 Right
(2) Luigi Pianciani October 1881May 1882 Left
5 Leopoldo Torlonia May 188231 December 1887 Right
6 Alessandro Guiccioli 24 October 188828 November 1889 Left
7 Augusto Armellini 28 November 188920 June 1890 Left
8 Onorato Caetani 29 December 189014 November 1892 Right
(4) Emanuele Ruspoli 14 November 189229 November 1899 Right
9 Prospero Colonna di Paliano December 1899October 1904 Right
10 Enrico Cruciani Alibrandi 10 July 190510 July 1907 Independent
11 Ernesto Nathan 25 November 19078 December 1913 Radical
(9) Prospero Colonna di Paliano 6 July 19148 June 1919 Liberal
12 Adolfo Apolloni 8 June 191925 November 1920 Liberal
13 Luigi Rava 25 November 192023 May 1921 Liberal
14 Giannetto Valli 23 May 192126 June 1922 Liberal
15 Filippo Cremonesi 26 June 19221 January 1926 Independent
Fascist Governor (1926–1944)
1 Filippo Cremonesi 1 January 19269 December 1926 PNF
2 Ludovico Spada Veralli Potenziani 9 December 192613 September 1928 PNF
3 Francesco Boncompagni Ludovisi 13 September 192823 January 1935 PNF
4 Giuseppe Bottai 23 January 193515 November 1936 PNF
5 Piero Colonna 15 November 193630 August 1939 PNF
6 Giangiacomo Borghese 30 August 193921 August 1943 PNF
7 Giovanni Orgera 6 January 194410 June 1944 PFR
Allied occupation (1944–1946)
16 Filippo Andrea VI Doria Pamphili 10 June 194410 December 1946 Independent

Republic of Italy (1946–present)

City Council election (1946–1993)

From 1946 to 1993, the Mayor of Rome was chosen by the City Council.

 MayorTerm startTerm endPartyCoalitionElection
17 Rebecchini 2.jpg Salvatore Rebecchini
(1891–1977)
10 December 19465 November 1947 DC DC 1946
5 November 19474 July 1952 DC   PLI   UQ 1947
4 July 19522 July 1956 DC   PLI   PRI 1952
18 Umberto Tupini2.jpg Umberto Tupini
(1889–1973)
2 July 195610 January 1958 DC Centrism
(DC   PLI   PRI   PSDI)
1956
19 Urbano Cioccetti, Mayor of Rome, recieves a letter from Mayor John F. Collins (13562815235) (cropped) (cropped).jpg Urbano Cioccetti
(1905–1978)
10 January 195811 July 1961 DC
-
Special Prefectural Commissioner tenure (11 July 1961 – 17 July 1962) [a]
1960
20 Glauco Della Porta.jpg Glauco Della Porta
(1920–1976)
17 July 196212 March 1964 DC Organic Centre-left
(DC   PSI   PSDI   PRI)
1962
21 Americo Petrucci.jpg Amerigo Petrucci
(1922–1983)
12 March 196428 July 1966 DC
28 July 196629 December 1967 1966
22 Rinaldo Santini.jpg Rinaldo Santini
(1914–2013)
29 December 196730 July 1969 DC
23 Clelio Darida.jpg Clelio Darida
(1927–2017)
30 July 19697 August 1971 DC DC   PSI   PSDI
7 August 19719 August 1976 DC 1971
24 Argan politico.jpg Giulio Carlo Argan
(1909–1992)
9 August 197629 September 1979 SI Red Executive
(PCI   PSI   PSDI   PRI)
1976
25 Italy politic personality icon.svg Luigi Petroselli
(1932–1981)
29 September 19797 October 1981 [b] PCI
26 Ugo Vetere.jpg Ugo Vetere
(1924–2013)
15 October 198130 July 1985 PCI 1981
27 Nicola Signorello.jpg Nicola Signorello
(1926–2022)
30 July 19856 August 1988 DC Pentapartito
(DC   PSI   PSDI   PRI   PLI)
1985
28 Italy politic personality icon.svg Pietro Giubilo
(b. 1942)
6 August 198819 July 1989 DC
-
Special Prefectural Commissioner tenure (19 July 1989 – 19 December 1989) [c]
29 Franco Carraro datisenato 2013.jpg Franco Carraro
(b. 1939)
19 December 198919 April 1993 PSI Pentapartito
(DC   PSI   PSDI   PRI   PLI)
1989
-
Special Prefectural Commissioner tenure (19 April 1993 – 6 December 1993) [d]
Notes
  1. Nominated by the Prefect after the City Council failed to elect a Mayor.
  2. Died in office.
  3. Nominated by the Prefect after the Mayor lost the support of the majority of the City Council.
  4. Nominated by the Prefect after the Mayor and the members of the City Council resigned in order to hold a new election under the provision of the new local electoral law.

Direct election (since 1993)

Since 1993, under provisions of new local administration law, the Mayor of Rome is chosen by direct election, originally every four, and since 2001 every five years.


Mayor of RomeTook officeLeft officePartyCoalitionElection
30 Francesco Rutelli 2001 crop.jpg Francesco Rutelli
(b. 1954)
6 December 199317 November 1997 FdV Alliance of Progressives
(PDS-FdV-AD-LP)
1993
17 November 19978 January 2001 [a] The Olive Tree
(PDS-PRC-FdV-PPI-LP-SDI)
1997
Enzo Mosino, Special Prefectural Commissioner (8 January 2001 – 1 June 2001)
31 Walter Veltroni cropped.jpg Walter Veltroni
(b. 1955)
1 June 20011 June 2006 DS
PD
The Olive Tree
(DS-FdV-DL-PRC)
2001
1 June 200613 February 2008 [b] The Olive Tree
(DS-FdV-DL-PRC-IdV-PdCI)
2006
Mario Morcone, Special Prefectural Commissioner (13 February 2008 – 28 April 2008)
32 Gianni Alemanno crop.jpg Gianni Alemanno
(b. 1958)
28 April 200812 June 2013 PdL PdL 2008
33 Ignazio Marino crop.jpg Ignazio Marino
(b. 1955)
12 June 201331 October 2015 [c] PD PD   SEL 2013
Francesco Paolo Tronca, Special Prefectural Commissioner (31 October 2015 – 22 June 2016)
34 Virginia Raggi 2018 (cropped).jpg Virginia Raggi
(b. 1978)
22 June 201621 October 2021 M5S M5S 2016
35 Roberto Gualtieri 2017.jpg Roberto Gualtieri
(b. 1966)
21 October 2021 [d] Incumbent PD PD   SI   EV   DemoS 2021
Notes
  1. He left the office because he was candidate at the 2001 general election as Prime Minister.
  2. He left the office because he was candidate at the 2008 general election as Prime Minister.
  3. Ousted from office after more than half the city's councillors stepped down.
  4. Election originally scheduled for June 2021 and then postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy.

Timeline

Mayors
Mayor of Rome
Political coalition
Five Star MovementCentre-right coalitionCentre-left coalitionPentapartitoItalian Communist PartyChristian Democracy (Italy)Organic Centre-leftCentrism (Italy)Mayor of Rome

By time in office

RankMayorPolitical PartyTotal time in office
1 Salvatore Rebecchini DC 9 years, 205 days
2 Francesco Rutelli FdV 7 years, 33 days
3 Clelio Darida DC 7 years, 10 days
4 Walter Veltroni DS 6 years, 257 days
5 Virginia Raggi M5S 5 years, 121 days
6 Gianni Alemanno PdL 5 years, 45 days
7 Amerigo Petrucci DC 3 years, 292 days
8 Ugo Vetere PCI 3 years, 288 days
9 Urbano Cioccetti DC 3 years, 182 days
10 Franco Carraro PSI 3 years, 121 days
11 Roberto Gualtieri PD 3 years, 64 days
12 Giulio Carlo Argan SI 3 years, 51 days
13 Nicola Signorello DC 3 years, 7 days
14 Ignazio Marino PD 2 years, 141 days
15 Luigi Petroselli PCI 2 years, 8 days
16 Glauco Della Porta DC 1 year, 239 days
17 Rinaldo Santini DC 1 year, 213 days
18 Umberto Tupini DC 1 year, 192 days
19 Pietro Giubilo DC 347 days

Election

Deputy Mayor

The office of the Deputy Mayor of Rome was officially created in 1993 with the adoption of the new local administration law. The Deputy Mayor is nominated and eventually dismissed by the Mayor.

#DeputyTerm startTerm endPartyMayor
1Walter Tocci8 December 199317 November 1997 PDS
DS
Rutelli
20 November 19978 January 2001
2Enrico Gasbarra4 June 200117 June 2003 [a] DL Veltroni
3 Mariapia Garavaglia 24 June 20031 June 2006 DL
8 June 200613 February 2008
4Mario Cutrufo16 May 200815 July 2011 [b] PdL Alemanno
5Sveva Belviso19 July 201112 June 2013 PdL
6Luigi Nieri27 June 201327 July 2015 [c] SEL Marino
7Marco Causi28 July 201531 October 2015 PD
8Daniele Frongia26 June 201617 December 2016 [d] M5S Raggi
9Luca Bergamo22 December 201625 January 2021 [e] M5S
10Pietro Calabrese27 January 202121 October 2021 M5S
11Silvia Scozzese3 November 2021Incumbent Ind Gualtieri
Notes
  1. Resigned after being elected President of the Province of Rome.
  2. Resigned.
  3. Resigned.
  4. Resigned.
  5. Dismissed by the Mayor.

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References

  1. President of the Government Council of Rome (Presidente della Giunta di Governo di Roma).
  2. 1 2 3 Acting mayor.