1997 Milan municipal election explained

Election Name:1997 Milan municipal election
Country:Milan
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1993 Milan municipal election
Previous Year:1993
Next Election:2001 Milan municipal election
Next Year:2001
Turnout:71.9% 6.2 pp (first round)
65.8% 6.1 pp (second round)
Election Date:27 April 1997 (first round)
11 May 1997 (second round)
Module:
Embed:yes
Election Name:Mayoral election
Type:presidential election
1Blank:1st Round vote
2Blank:Percentage
3Blank:2nd Round vote
4Blank:Percentage
Candidate1:Gabriele Albertini
Party1:Forza Italia
Colour1:0A6BE1
Alliance1:Centre-right coalition (Italy)
1Data1:318,063
2Data1:40.7%
3Data1:385,496
4Data1:53.1%
Candidate2:Aldo Fumagalli
Party2:Independent politician
Colour2:F0002B
Alliance2:Centre-left coalition (Italy)
1Data2:214,728
2Data2:27.5%
3Data2:339,942
4Data2:46.9%
Mayor
Before Election:Marco Formentini
Before Party:LN
After Election:Gabriele Albertini
After Party:FI
Module:
Election Name:City Council election
Embed:yes
Seats For Election:All 60 seats in City Council
Majority Seats:31
Party1:Centre-right
Percentage1:43.75
Leader1:Gabriele Albertini
Seats1:36
Last Election1:0
Party2:Centre-left
Percentage2:25.54
Leader2:Aldo Fumagalli
Seats2:12
Last Election2:13
Party3:LN
Percentage3:16.23
Leader3:Marco Formentini
Seats3:8
Last Election3:36
Party4:PRC
Percentage4:9.12
Leader4:Umberto Gay
Seats4:4
Last Election4:6

Municipal elections were held in Milan on 27 April and 11 May 1997 to elect the Mayor of Milan and the 60 members of the City Council.

As no candidate won a majority in the first round, a runoff was held between the top two candidates – Gabriele Albertini, a businessman close to Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia (FI) and Aldo Fumagalli, a young businessman and former president of Milan Young Entrepreneurs' Confederation, supported by The Olive Tree coalition – which Albertini won by a decisive margin.[1]

The incumbent Mayor Marco Formentini came third and couldn't access to the second round of the election.[1]

Background

During the previous years, the incumbent mayor Marco Formentini was repeatedly criticized for his controversial administrative choices. In August 1994 his decision to move the far-left self-managed social centre Leoncavallo from its historic headquarters to a small warehouse resulted in many violent clashes between activists and police in several streets across the city.[2] In November 1995 he struggled to handle an unprecedented waste management crisis which resulted in mountains of garbage left not collected in the streets.[3] In February 1996 his administration was put at risk by an inquiry on an alleged abuse of power which overwhelmed the deputy Mayor and some members of the municipal executive: in May 1996 Formentini hardly survived a motion of no confidence in the City Council thanks to the support of two councillors of the opposition parties.[4] His decision to seek re-election was seen by many as a hard and unrealistic move.

Against the Mayor, the newborn Forza Italia party (FI) presented its own mayoral candidate: the businessman Gabriele Albertini, president of the Italian Mechanical Engineers' Trade Union Federation. Seen as a member of the catholic milanese middle class, Albertini was the right profile for represent the new political experiment led by the milanese successful businessman and former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.[5] Forza Italia and Pole for Freedoms coalition's aim was to attract moderate voters who were "disoriented, political orphans and who risked being unrepresented" (as Berlusconi described them), especially after the Democratic Party of the Left (PDS) (the direct heir of the Italian Communist Party) had been able to win the 1996 national general election and enter in government for the first time since 1947. At the same time in March 1997 the centre-left government's popularity was sinking, especially because of its handling of the Albanian unrest which resulted in a huge number of Albanian refugees admitted to Italy and redistributed across the country with the subsequent protest of many right-wing parties and movements.[6]

Despite a common position upon the Albanian refugees problem, at the local level right-wing forces were unable to find a deal. In December 1994 Northern League leader Umberto Bossi had broken the alliance with Berlusconi, causing his government to fall. As a consequence of this political split which was still unresolved after three years and because of Formentini's unstable administration, the centre-right Pole for Freedoms coalition finally decided to rule out a possible alliance with the Northern League (LN).[5]

The centre-left coalition decided to present the 38-years old independent businessman Aldo Fumagalli as its mayoral candidate. As a consequence of the frequent tensions with Prime Minister Romano Prodi, the far-left Communist Refoundation Party (PRC) decided to broke the alliance with the centre-left at the local level and presented the civil rights activistic Umberto Gay as candidate for Mayor.[7]

Voting system

The semipresidential voting system was the one used for all mayoral elections in Italy of cities with a population higher than 15,000 for the second time. Under this system voters express a direct choice for the Mayor or an indirect choice voting for the party of the candidate's coalition. If no candidate receives at least 50% of votes, the top two candidates go to a second round after two weeks. This gives a result whereby the winning candidate may be able to claim majority support.

The election of the City Council is based on a direct choice for the candidate with a preference vote: the candidate with the majority of the preferences is elected. The number of the seats for each losing party is determined proportionally.

Parties and candidates

This is a list of the major parties (and their respective leaders) which participated in the election.

Political party or allianceConstituent listsCandidate
Umberto Gay
Centre-left coalition
(The Olive Tree)
Aldo Fumagalli
Others
Marco Formentini
Centre-right coalition
(Pole for Freedoms)
Gabriele Albertini
Others

Results

Gabriele Albertini won the election on the second round and on 12 May 1997 he was officially declared the new Mayor of Milan. At that time he led the very first right-wing municipal administration in the history of the city.

Summary of the 1997 Milan City Council and Mayoral election results
Candidates1st round2nd roundLeader's
seat
PartiesVotes%Seats
Votes%Votes%
Gabriele Albertini318,06340.71385,49653.14Forza ItaliaUnited Christian Democrats192,81429.7625
National Alliance77,134 11.9010
Christian Democratic Centre9,3371.441
Federalist Party – Liberals – Union of the Centre2,314 0.36
Pensioners' Party1,879 0.29
Total283,478 43.7536
Aldo Fumagalli214,72827.48339,94246.86Democratic Party of the Left120,99918.679
Italian People's Party18,2392.821
Federation of the Greens17,1482.651
5,9290.92
Pact for Milan3,1910.49
Total165,506 25.5411
149,50119.14Northern League100,18415.467
Padanian Workers 2,1410.33
Padania Safe Pension 1,6110.25
Craftsmen Traders Industrialists 1,2000.19
Total105,136 16.237
Umberto Gay62,8978.05bgcolor=Communist Refoundation Party59,1019.123
Giorgio Santerini7,1540.92United Socialists (SIPS)7,3371.13
Giancarlo Cito5,8790.75Southern Action League5,5390.85
Tomaso Staiti
di Cuddia delle Chiuse
5,0200.64Tricolour Flame4,686 0.72
Antonio Marinoni4,8640.62Italian Renewal4,5700.71
Giorgio Schultze3,2480.42Humanist Party2,9630.46
Marco Tordelli2,7580.35Federal Italy2,5940.40
Giovanni Bucci2,0050.26FederItalia1,8950.29
Ugo Sarao1,9560.25Pensions and Work 1,8640.29
Giovanni Fabbrini1,4870.19Out of the Lie 1,5360.24
Sergio Bontempelli9470.12Civil City 1,0190.16
Ugo Frisoli7540.10United Italy6970.11
Total781,261100.00725,438100.003align=right colspan=2647,921100.0057
Eligible voters100.00100.00
Did not vote28.0834.16
Voted71.9265.84
Blank or invalid ballots1.52.1
Total valid votes98.597.9
Source: Ministry of the Interior

References

  1. News: 12 May 1997. Castellani sindaco, Milano al Polo. it. La Stampa. 4 April 2021.
  2. News: 10 August 1994. Sgomberato il Leoncavallo. "Un vero atto di pirateria". it. la Repubblica. 4 April 2021.
  3. News: 27 November 1995. Milano sotto l'assedio dei rifiuti. it. la Repubblica. 4 April 2021.
  4. News: 15 May 1996. Milano, la giunta appesa a un filo. it. la Repubblica. 4 April 2021.
  5. News: 3 March 1997. Albertini senza il simbolo del Polo?. it. la Repubblica. 4 April 2021.
  6. News: 19 March 1997. L'assedio dei poveri. it. la Repubblica. 4 April 2021.
  7. News: 13 December 1996. Bertinotti lancia la sfida al PDS. it. la Repubblica. 4 April 2021.