1997 Rome municipal election explained

Election Name:1997 Rome municipal election
Flag Image:Flag of Rome.svg
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1993 Rome municipal election
Previous Year:1993
Next Election:2001 Rome municipal election
Next Year:2001
Election Date:16 November 1997
Turnout:74.1% 4.6 pp
Module:
Embed:yes
Election Name:Mayoral election
Type:presidential election
1Blank:Popular vote
2Blank:Percentage
Candidate1:Francesco Rutelli
Party1:FdV
Colour1:F0002B
Alliance1:Centre-left coalition (Italy)
1Data1:985,361
2Data1:60.4%
Candidate2:Pierluigi Borghini
Party2:AN
Colour2:0A6BE1
Alliance2:Centre-right coalition (Italy)
1Data2:586,083
2Data2:35.9%
Mayor
Before Election:Francesco Rutelli
Before Party:FdV
After Election:Francesco Rutelli
After Party:FdV
Module:
Election Name:City Council election
Embed:yes
Seats For Election:All 60 seats in City Council
Majority Seats:31
Party1:Centre-left
Percentage1:57.37
Leader1:Francesco Rutelli
Seats1:36
Last Election1:36
Party2:Centre-right
Percentage2:38.62
Leader2:Pierluigi Borghini
Seats2:23
Party3:Tricolour Flame
Percentage3:1.82
Leader3:Pino Rauti
Seats3:1

Municipal elections were held in Rome on 16 November 1997 to elect the Mayor of Rome and 60 members of the City Council, as well as the nineteen presidents and more than 400 councillors of the 19 circoscrizioni in which the municipality was divided.

As a result, incumbent mayor Francesco Rutelli was re-elected for a second four-year term by a landslide.

Background

In the 1996 general elections the centre-left coalition led by Romano Prodi performed strongly in nearly all the urban centers across Italy and especially in the city of Rome. Since that moment the political support to leftist parties in Rome started to increase heavily, although the former-fascist National Alliance (AN) continued to maintain a huge number of supporters across the city.

During the previous years, the incumbent mayor Francesco Rutelli saw his personal popularity increase among Roman citizens.[1] During his term in office he promoted some important architectural and urban projects to redevelop the city such as the approval of Parco della Musica concert hall designed by Renzo Piano in 1994[2] and the urban plan called "Cento piazze" (literally "One hundred squares") in 1995, a project to renovate different squares and creating new pedestrian zones in many parts of the city, from the historical city center to the suburbs.[3] Thanks to this plan many historical and tourist landmarks of Rome were renovated and pedestrianized such as Piazza di Spagna (1995) and Piazza del Popolo (1997).

As a part of his plan to renovate the city, in March 1995 Rutelli submitted an unsuccessful bid to host the 2004 Summer Olympics, which were ultimately awarded to Athens in September 1997.[4]

Against the mayor, the centre-right Pole for Freedoms coalition initially seemed intentioned to propose the candidacy of the right-wing deputy Francesco Storace,[5] but ultimately chose Pierluigi Borghini, a famous conservative businessman, in an attempt to gain more votes from independent and centrist voters.[6]

Voting system

The voting system is used for all mayoral elections in Italy, in the city with a population higher than 15,000 inhabitants. 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 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, although it is not guaranteed.

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 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
Centre-left coalition
(The Olive Tree)
Francesco Rutelli
bgcolor=pink
Rutelli List
Others
Centre-right coalition
(Pole for Freedoms)
Pierluigi Borghini
Others
Pino Rauti

Results

Summary of the 1997 Rome City Council and Mayoral election results
CandidatesVotes%Leader's
seat
PartiesVotes%Seats
Francesco Rutelli 983,90260.42Democratic Party of the Left281,83221.9815
Communist Refoundation Party112,6288.786
Rutelli List89,7907.005
Federation of the Greens83,321 6.504
Italian People's Party71,123 5.553
29,3872.291
Pannella List20,8781.631
Democratic Socialists20,8591.631
Democratic Union17,9221.40
Italian Republican Party7,9460.62
Total735,68657.3736
Pierluigi Borghini585,36735.94National Alliance308,74524.08 14
Forza ItaliaUnited Christian Democrats129,39110.096
Christian Democratic CentrePact for Rome47,6813.722
Federalist Greens5,846 0.46
United Italy3,5280.28
Total495,19138.6222
Pino Rauti26,3891.62Tricolour Flame23,3801.82
Tiziana Parenti12,5860.77Liberal Socialists10,2180.80
Raffaele D'Ambrosio7,9880.49Humanitas9,101 0.71
Sforza Ruspoli5,9650.37Civic list4,2460.33
Marina Larena4,0910.25Humanist Party2,6870.21
Giancarlo Cito2,2330.14Southern Action League1,7510.14
Total1,628,521100.002align=right colspan=21,282,260100.0058
Eligible voters100.00
Did not vote25.91
Voted74.09
Blank or invalid ballots4.48
Total valid votes95.52
Source: Ministry of the Interior

Circoscrizioni election

Since 1972 the city of Rome had been divided into 20 administrative areas, called circoscrizioni (reduced to 19 in 1992 after Fiumicino became an independent comune separated from Rome). In 1997 for the first time the presidents of each circoscrizione was directly elected by citizens. No second round was needed since the candidate who received the most votes was elected president.

Table below shows the results for each circoscrizione with the percentage for each coalition:

CircoscrizioneCentre-leftCentre-rightElected PresidentParty
I55.039.7Attilio BellucciRI
II48.246.1Giuseppe IgnestiPDS
III53.441.0Vittorio SartogoPRC
IV53.832.3Massimo NardiPPI
V61.532.5Loredana MezzabottaPDS
VI59.032.6Enzo PuroPDS
VII55.338.5Pino Battaglia
VIII54.236.7Giuseppe Celli
IX55.339.0Fulvio TorretiFdV
X57.935.1Giusto Trevisiol
XI56.138.8Rosario Mocciaro
XII52.941.6Antonio Gazzellone
XIII53.136.3Massimo Di Somma
XV58.037.4Giovanni ParisPPI
XVI58.037.5Dario Marcucci
XVII50.743.5Marco Noccioli
XVIII48.544.5Nicola PalombiRI
XIX53.040.4Emilia Allocca
XX45.947.3Marco ClarkeAN
Source: Municipality of Rome - Electoral Service

References

  1. News: 10 November 1994. Il politico più sexy? Francesco Rutelli. it. la Repubblica. 15 July 2022.
  2. News: 26 July 1994. Così Piano inventò l'auditorium di Roma. it. la Repubblica. 15 July 2022.
  3. News: 28 August 1997. Piazza del Popolo, nasce l'isola. it. la Repubblica. 15 July 2022.
  4. News: 17 March 1995. Roma 2004 si candida, Samaranch applaude. it. la Repubblica. 15 July 2022.
  5. News: 13 June 1997. Fini punta su Storace sindaco di Roma. it. la Repubblica. 15 July 2022.
  6. News: 30 June 1997. Ora il Polo fa pressing su Borghini. it. la Repubblica. 15 July 2022.