2010 Italian local elections explained

The 2010 Italian local elections were held on different dates; most on 29–30 March (second round on 11–12 April) concurrently with the Regional elections.

In Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol the elections were held on 15–16 May with a second ballot on 30–31 May; all of 321 comuni of the region voted for a new mayor and a new City Council.

In Aosta Valley the elections were held on 23–24 May in the city of Aosta.

On May 30–31 the elections were held in Sicily and Sardinia.

In Italy, direct elections were held in municipalities and provinces: in each municipality (comune) were chosen mayor and members of the City Council, in each province were chosen president and members of the Provincial Council.

Citizens living in Italy who were 18 or over on election day were entitled to vote in the local council elections.

Voting system

The voting system is used for all mayoral elections in Italy in cities with a population higher than 15,000. 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, 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.[1]

Municipal elections

Mayoral election results

CitiesIncumbent mayorAllianceElected mayorAlliance
AostaGuido GrimodValdostan UnionBruno GiordanoValdostan Union
BolzanoLuigi SpagnolliCentre-leftLuigi SpagnolliCentre-left
VeniceMassimo CacciariCentre-leftGiorgio OrsoniCentre-left
MantuaFiorenza BrioniCentre-leftNicola SodanoCentre-right
LeccoSante Frantellizzibgcolor=NoneVirginio BrivioCentre-left
LodiLorenzo GueriniCentre-leftLorenzo GueriniCentre-left
MacerataGiorgio MeschiniCentre-leftRomano CaranciniCentre-left
ChietiFrancesco RicciCentre-leftUmberto Di PrimioCentre-right
MateraSandro Calvosabgcolor=NoneSalvatore AdduceCentre-left
AndriaVincenzo ZaccaroCentre-leftNicola GiorginoCentre-right
Vibo ValentiaFrancesco SammarcoCentre-leftNicola D'AgostinoCentre-right
NuoroMauro Demuru ZiddaCentre-leftAlessandro BianchiCentre-left
IglesiasPierluigi CartaCentre-leftPierluigi CartaCentre-left
SassariGianfranco GanauCentre-leftGianfranco GanauCentre-left
EnnaGaspare AgnelloCentre-leftPaolo GarofaloCentre-left

City councils

CityPdLPDLNSELIdVOthers
Venice101740427
Mantua14961104
Lecco82071101
Lodi814601010
Chieti137002611
Matera412014117
Vibo Valentia183010215
Macerata81404227
Andria134021017
Sassari613022313
Iglesias4601089
Nuoro413021215

Provincial elections

Only 12 provinces were up for election. The elections was for a new provincial president and members of the Provincial Council.Four presidents were elected in March. Then on May was elected all the provincial president and Provincial Council of Sardinia.

President election results

ProvincesIncumbent presidentAllianceElected presidentAlliance
ImperiaGiovanni GiulianoCentre-rightLuigi SappaCentre-right
ViterboAlessandro MazzoliCentre-leftMarcello MeroiCentre-right
L'AquilaStefania PezzopaneCentre-leftAntonio Del CorvoCentre-right
CasertaAlessandro De FranciscisCentre-leftDomenico ZinziCentre-right
CagliariGraziano MiliaCentre-leftGraziano MiliaCentre-left
Carbonia-IglesiasPierfranco GavianoCentre-leftSalvatore CherchiCentre-left
Medio CampidanoFulvio ToccoCentre-leftFulvio ToccoCentre-left
NuoroRoberto DeriuCentre-leftRoberto DeriuCentre-left
OgliastraCentre-leftBruno PiliaCentre-left
Olbia-TempioAnna Pietrina MurrighileCentre-leftFedele SanciuCentre-right
OristanoPasquale OnidaCentre-rightMassimiliano De SeneenCentre-right
SassariAlessandra GiudiciCentre-leftAlessandra GiudiciCentre-left

See also

Notes and References

  1. The compactness of the minority is part of the goals that the law intends to achieve, avoiding fragmentation to establish a fruitful counterweight to the majority: Buonomo. Giampiero. Provinciali, seggi ai perdenti con il criterio delle coalizioni. Diritto&Giustizia Edizione Online. 2001. 2016-03-17. 2016-03-24. https://web.archive.org/web/20160324160801/https://www.questia.com/projects#!/project/89289206. dead.