Mayor of Milan explained

Post:Mayor
Body:Milan
Insignia:CoA Città di Milano.svg
Insigniasize:100px
Native Name:Sindaco di Milano
Sindech de Milan
Incumbentsince:21 June 2016
Appointer:Electorate of Milan
Termlength:5 years, renewable once
Formation:8 November 1807
Inaugural:Antonio Durini
Deputy:Anna Scavuzzo
Salary:€7,800 monthly
Seat:Palazzo Marino

The mayor of Milan (Italian: sindaco di Milano; Sindech de Milan) is the first citizen and head of the municipal government of the city of Milan, Lombardy, Italy.

The current office holder is Giuseppe Sala,[1] a centre-left independent who has been in charge since 2016 leading a progressive alliance composed by the Democratic Party, Green Europe and some civic lists. The last election took place in 2021.

Overview

According to the Italian Constitution, the mayor of Milan is a member of the Milan's City Council. The mayor and the other 48 city councillors (consiglieri comunali) are elected by the Italian and EU citizens residing in Milan. Concurrently, albeit with a different ballot paper, nine presidents and 270 councillors are chosen for the nine assemblies of the nine municipalities, often referred to as zones, in which the city is divided, each one having one president and 30 councillors. All the offices are elected for five-year terms.

After the election, the mayor can appoint one vice mayor (currently Anna Scavuzzo) and up to 16 assessors;[2] together they form the municipal government (giunta comunale) and they implement the municipal policies, which are determined and controlled by the City Council. The City Council has also the power to dismiss the mayor or any of the assessors with a motion of no confidence. Similar procedures take place at the municipality level, where the mayor is called the president of the municipality (presidente del municipio) and there are three assessors.

Since 1993, Italian mayors of municipalities of more than 15,000 inhabitants have been directly elected by their respective electorates. Voters can express their choice for the mayor and for a list of municipal councillors not necessarily supporting the same mayor-candidate (voto disgiunto). If no mayor-candidate receives a majority of votes, a run-off election is held two weeks later among the top two candidates. In the list choice, each voter can express one or two preferences for councillor candidates; in the case of two preferences, their gender must be different. The party and civic lists supporting the elected mayor are granted a majority of the City Council seats, divided proportionally to each list result, by means of a majority bonus; the remaining seats are then assigned proportionally to the opposition lists.

The official seat of the mayor and of the City Council is Milan's City Hall, Palazzo Marino, in Piazza della Scala (Municipality 1). Each municipality has its own official seat as well, within its respective territory.

List

Rectors

class=unsortable RectorTerm startTerm endAppointer
1Antonio Durini30 November 180722 October 1814Napoleon I of France
2Cesare Giulini Della Porta22 October 18142 January 1820Francis I of Austria
3Carlo Villa2 January 18207 August 1827
(1)Antonio Durini7 August 18272 January 1837
4Gabrio Casati2 January 18373 August 1848Ferdinand I of Austria
5Franz Graf von Wimpffen3 August 18486 January 1849Franz Joseph I of Austria
6Antonio Pestalozza6 January 184927 November 1856
7Giuseppe Sebregondi27 November 185610 June 1859
8Luigi Barbiano di Belgioioso10 June 185926 January 1860Victor Emmanuel II of Italy

Kingdom of Italy (1860–1946)

class=unsortable MayorTerm startTerm endParty
1Antonio Beretta
(1808–1891)
26 January 186013 February 1867Right
2Giulio Belinzaghi
(1818–1892)
13 February 186725 April 1884Right
3Gaetano Negri
(1838–1902)
25 April 188421 November 1889Right
(2)Giulio Belinzaghi
(1818–1892)
21 November 188928 September 1892Right
4Giuseppe Vigoni
(1846–1914)
28 September 189218 September 1899Right
5Giuseppe Mussi
(1836–1904)
18 September 189916 September 1903Left
6Giovanni Battista Barinetti
(1849–1942)
16 September 19037 February 1905Left
7Ettore Ponti
(1855–1919)
7 February 190511 May 1909Right
8Bassano Gabba
(1844–1928)
11 May 190930 January 1911Right
9Emanuele Greppi
(1853–1931)
30 January 191130 June 1914Liberal
10Emilio Caldara
(1868–1942)
30 June 191420 November 1920Socialist
11Angelo Filippetti
(1866–1936)
20 November 192030 December 1922Socialist
12Luigi Mangiagalli
(1850–1928)
30 December 192219 August 1926Liberal
Fascist Podestà (1926–1945)
1Ernesto Belloni
(1883–1938)
19 August 19266 September 1928PNF
2Giuseppe De Capitani D'Arzago
(1870–1945)
6 September 192820 November 1929PNF
3Marcello Visconti di Modrone
(1898–1964)
20 November 192919 November 1935PNF
4Guido Pesenti
(1884–1962)
19 November 193513 June 1938PNF
5Gian Giacomo Gallarati Scotti
(1886–1983)
13 June 193814 August 1943PNF
6Piero Parini
(1894–1993)
14 October 19434 May 1944PFR
7Guido Andreoni4 May 194413 September 1944PFR
8Giuseppe Spinelli
(1908–1987)
13 September 194423 January 1945PFR
9Mario Colombo23 January 194525 April 1945PFR
Liberation (1945-1946)
13Antonio Greppi
(1894–1982)
25 April 19457 April 1946Socialist

Italian Republic (1946–present)

City Council election (1946–1993)

From 1946 to 1993, the mayor of Milan was chosen by the City Council.

class=unsortable Mayor Term startTerm endPartyCoalitionElection
1Antonio Greppi
(1894–1982)
7 April 194628 March 1949PSIPSI PCI DC1946
28 March 194925 June 1951PSI PRI PSLI
2Virgilio Ferrari
(1888–1975)
25 June 195110 September 1956PSDIDC PSDI PRI PLI1951
10 September 195621 January 1961DC PSDI1956
3Gino Cassinis
(1885–1964)
21 January 196113 January 1964PSDIDC PSDI PSI1960
4Pietro Bucalossi
(1905–1992)
17 February 196422 January 1965PSDI
22 January 196513 December 19671964
5Aldo Aniasi
(1921–2005)
13 December 196730 July 1970PSI
30 July 197031 July 1975DC PSI PSDI PRI1970
31 July 197512 May 19761975
6Carlo Tognoli
(1938–2021)
12 May 19767 February 1977PSI
7 February 197731 July 1980PCI PSI PSDI
31 July 19805 August 19851980
5 August 198521 December 1986DC PSI PRI PSDI PLI1985
7Paolo Pillitteri
(b. 1940)
21 December 19868 January 1988PSI
8 January 19883 August 1990PCI PSI PSDI FLV
3 August 199018 January 1992PCI PSI PRI FdV1990
8Giampiero Borghini
(b. 1943)
18 January 199211 March 1993PSIDC PSI PSDI PLI
-Claudio Gelati11 March 199321 June 1993Special prefectural commissioner
Notes

Direct election (since 1993)

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


Mayor of MilanTook officeLeft officePartyCoalitionElection
9Marco Formentini
(1930–2021)
21 June 199312 May 1997LNLN1993
10Gabriele Albertini
(b. 1950)
12 May 199714 May 2001Pole for Freedoms
(FI-AN-CCD)
1997
14 May 20011 June 2006House of Freedoms
(FI-AN-LN-UDC)
2001
11Letizia Moratti
(b. 1949)
1 June 20061 June 2011House of Freedoms
(FI-AN-LN-UDC)
2006
12Giuliano Pisapia
(b. 1949)
1 June 201121 June 2016IndPD SEL FdS RI2011
13Giuseppe Sala
(b. 1958)
21 June 20166 October 2021Ind2016
6 October 2021In office2021
Notes

By time in office

width=3%Rankwidth=25%Mayorwidth=10%Political Partywidth=30%Total time in officewidth=10%Terms
1Carlo Tognoli2
2Virgilio Ferrari2
3Gabriele Albertini2
4Aldo Aniasi2
5Giuseppe SalaInd2
6Antonio Greppi1
7Paolo Pillitteri2
8Giuliano Pisapia1
9Letizia Moratti1
10Marco Formentini1
11Pietro Bucalossi1
12Gino Cassinis1
13Giampiero BorghiniPSI1

Elections

See main article: Elections in Milan.

Deputy Mayor

The office of the Deputy Mayor of Milan 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.

class=unsortable DeputyTerm startTerm endPartyMayor
1Giorgio Malagoli24 June 199312 May 1997LNFormentini
2Riccardo De Corato21 May 199714 May 2001ANAlbertini
21 May 20011 June 2006
20 June 20061 June 2011Moratti
3Maria Grazia Guida10 June 201121 January 2013PDPisapia
3Ada Lucia De Cesaris 28 January 201315 July 2015PD
4Francesca Balzani17 July 201521 June 2016PD
5Anna Scavuzzo29 June 20166 October 2021PDSala
13 October 2021Incumbent
Notes

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Il Sindaco - Comune di Milano. 2021-04-28. www.comune.milano.it.
  2. Web site: La Giunta - Comune di Milano. 2021-04-28. www.comune.milano.it.