List of mayors of Naples

Mayor of Naples
Incumbent
Luigi De Magistris
(Italy of Values)

since June 1, 2011
Appointer Popular election
Term length 5 years, renewable once
Inaugural holder Andrea Colonna
Formation August 8, 1860
Succession May-June, 2016
Deputy Tommaso Sodano
Website [4]

The Mayor of Naples is an elected politician who, along with the Naples’s City Council of 50 members, is accountable for the strategic government of Naples. Since 1 June 2011, Luigi De Magistris holds the position. Previously, the position was held by Rosa Russo Iervolino from the May 2001 until his succession by De Magistris.

The following is a list of Mayors of Naples, Italy.

Contents

Mayors

Since 1860, newborn Kingdom of Italy created the office of the Mayor of Naples (Sindaco di Napoli), chosen by the City council since 1889:

Fascist Rectors

Fascist dictatorship abolished mayors and City councils in 1926, replacing them with a single authoritarian Rector (Podestà) chosen by the National Fascist Party:

Constitutional term transitional

Democratic Mayors

From 1946 to 1993, the Mayor of Naples was chosen by the City council:

# Name Start
date
End
date
Party Coalition Elections
1 Giuseppe Buonocore 1946 1948 Democratic monarchist BNL - DC 1946
2 Domenico Moscati 1948 1952 Christian democratic BNL - DC - PLI -
3 Achille Lauro 1952 1957 Monarchist PNM - MSI 1952, 1956
4 Sansanelli Nicola 1957 1958[2] Monarchist PNP -
5 Achille Lauro 1960 1961[3] Monarchist PDIUM 1960
6 Vincenzo Maria Palmieri 1962 1963 Christian democratic PDIUM - DC 1962
7 Ferdinando Clemente di San Luca 1963 1966 Christian democratic PDIUM - DC (1963–64)

DC - PSI - PSDI (1964–66)

1964
8 Giovanni Principe 1966 1970 Christian democratic DC - PSI - PSDI -
9 Gerardo De Michele 1970 1974 Christian democratic DC - PSI - PSDI - PRI 1970
10 Bruno Milanesi 1974 1975 Christian democratic DC - PSI - PSDI - PRI -
11 Mauro Valenzi 1975 1983 Communist PCI - PSI - PSDI 1975, 1980
12 Francesco Picardi 1983 1984 Socialdemocratic DC - PSI - PSDI 1983
13 Vincenzo Scotti 1984 1984 Christian democratic DC - PSI - PSDI -
14 Mario Forte 1984 1984 Christian democratic DC - PSI - PSDI - PRI - PLI -
15 Carlo D'Amato 1984 1987 Socialist DC - PSI - PSDI - PRI - PLI -
16 Pietro Lezzi 1987 1990 Socialist DC - PSI - PRI - PLI 1987
17 Nello Polese 1990 1993 Socialist DC - PSI - PRI - PLI 1992
18 Francesco Tagliamonte 1993 1993 Christian democratic DC - PSI - PRI - PLI -

Elected mayors

Since 1993, under provisions of new local administration law, the Mayor of Naples is chosen by popular election, originally every four, and later every five years.


Mayor of Naples Took office Left office Party Coalition
19 Antonio Bassolino December 5, 1993 March 24, 2000[4] Democratic Party of the Left then
Democrats of the Left
PDS - PRC - FV
December 5, 1993 – December 1, 1997
The Olive Tree
December 1, 1997 – June 1, 2001
20 Rosa Russo Iervolino June 1, 2001 June 1, 2011 Democracy is Freedom - The Daisy then
Democratic Party
The Olive Tree
June 1, 2001 – June 1, 2006
The Olive Tree
June 1, 2006 – June 1, 2011
21 Luigi De Magistris June 1, 2011 incumbent Italy of Values IDV - PRC
since June 1, 2011

Elections

Council elections (1946-1993)

After the Second World War, the first democratic election in Naples took place on November 10, 1946;[5] for the first time since 1926 the inhabitans (men and women, without distinction) could vote their representantives in the City Council with the proportional system of vote.

In 1946 the conservatives parties of the monarchists and christian democratics received the 53% of the votes and a big representaion in the City Council; the Popolar Democratic Front, which was composed by communists and socialists, received the 31% of the votes and didn't hav the majority in the City Council.

The same thing happened in the others elections (May 25, 1952; May 27, 1956; November 6, 1960; June 10, 1962); instead of the rest of Italy, in Naples the monarchists were very populars and obteined the majority in the City Council for more than 15 years.

In 1964 for the first time the Christian Democracy obteined the 34% of the votes and a strong majority in the City Council.

On 15 June 1975 the communists won the election and could form a coalition with the socialists for have the majority in the Council: the first communist mayor of Naples was Mauro Valenzi (who was re-elected after 1980's election).[6]

The following is the number of seats of each party in the City Council after each election:

Year DC PCI PSI PNM MSI PRI Others
1948 11 - - 57 - - 12
1952 11 - 1 37 15 - 15
1956 13 16 3 45 2 - 1
1960 23 17 7 29 3 - 2
1962 23 17 7 25 4 - 4
1964 29 20 5 7 8 - 11
1970 28 22 6 3 10 2 9
1975 24 27 5 - 15 2 7
1980 21 27 6 - 18 2 7
1983 20 23 9 - 17 4 7
1987 26 19 13 - 8 4 10
1992 25 - 16 - 7 5 25

Mayoral and Council election, 1993

The election took place in two rounds: the first on November 21 and the second on December 5.

For the first time under the new electoral law citizens could vote directly the mayor; before this choise was made by the City Council. For the first time in the municipal political history there weren't parties like Christian Democracy, Italian Socialist Party or Italian Communist Party: the main parties were the Italian Social Movement and the Democratic Party of the Left.

The main candidates were Antonio Bassolino and Benito Mussolini's grand-daughter Alessandra. However there were a lot of others candidates from different parties.

On December 5 1993, Bassolino won the election and became the first elected mayor of Naples.

Naples Mayoral Election Results 1993
Name Party 1st Round
(November 21)

 % 2nd Round
(December 5)

 %
Antonio Bassolino Democratic Party of the Left 229.649 41,6 300.964 55,6
Alessandra Mussolini Italian Social Movement 171.315 31,1 239.867 44,4

Mayoral and Council election, 1997

The election took place on November 16.

The main candidates were Emiddio Novi, supported by Silvio Berlusconi's coalition Pole of Freedoms and by some christian-democratic parties, and Antonio Bassolino, supported by Romano Prodi's coalition The Olive Tree.

Bassolino won the election with the 73% of the votes.

Naples Mayoral Election Results 1997
Name Party 1st Round
(November 16)

 %
Antonio Bassolino Democratic Party of the Left 405.173 72,9
Emiddio Novi Forza Italia 140.548 25,9

Mayoral and Council election, 2001

The election took place in two rounds: the first on May 13 and the second on May 27.

The main candidates were Antonio Martusciello, supported by Silvio Berlusconi's center-right coalition, and Rosa Russo Iervolino, supported by Francesco Rutelli's center-left coalition The Olive Tree.

Naples Mayoral Election Results 2001
Name Party 1st Round
(May 13)

 % 2nd Round
(May 27)

 %
Rosa Russo Iervolino Italian People's Party 262.818 48,2 278.183 52,9
Antonio Martusciello Forza Italia 246.089 45,7 247.564 47,1

Mayoral and Council election, 2006

The election took place on May 28-29.

The incumbent mayor Rosa Russo Iervolino won with the 57% of the votes.

Naples Mayoral Election Results 2006
Name Party 1st Round
(May 28-29)

 %
Rosa Russo Iervolino Democracy is Freedom - The Daisy 304.755 57,04
Franco Malvano Forza Italia 201.987 37,8

Mayoral and Council election, 2011

The election took place in two rounds: the first on May 15-16 and the second on May 29-30.

The main candidates were the entrepreneur Gianni Lettieri, from Silvio Berlusconi's party People of Freedom, the prefect Mario Morcone, from Democratic Party, and the magisrate Luigi De Magistris, from Antonio Di Pietro's party Italy of Values.

In March 2011, Morcone was chosen as the candidate center-left coalition with the coalition primary elections. However, De Magistris decided to run without the support of the center-left coalition; he was supported by his party, Communist Refoundation Party and some civic lists.

On the first round Lettieri was ahead with the 37% of the votes, but on the second round De Magistris won the election with the 65% of the votes.

In these election Democratic Party obtained the worst result since 1993, People of Freedom failed once again to conquer the city and De Magistris became the first elected mayor of Naples from a left-wing party.

Naples Mayoral Election Results 2011[7]
Name Party 1st Round
(May 15-16)

 % 2nd Round
(May 29-30)

 %
Luigi De Magistris Italy of Values 128.303 27,52 264.730 65,37
Gianni Lettieri People of Freedom 179.575 38,52 140.203 34,62
Mario Morcone Democratic Party 89.280 19,15 - -
Naples Council Election 2011 - Parties
Coalition votes  % seats Party votes  % seats
Left (De Magistris) 68,522 16.7 29 Italy of Values
Communist Refoundation Party
Civic Lists (2)
33,320
15,008
20,194
8.1
3.7
4.9
15
6
8
Center-right (Lettieri) 176,901 43.1 10 People of Freedom
Italian Republican Party
The Right
Civic Lists (8)
97,752
5,976
4,567
68,606
23.9
1.4
1.1
16.7
7
-
-
3
Center-left (Morcone) 92,983 22.7 4 Democratic Party
Left Ecology Freedom
Greens-Socialists
Civic List (1)
68,018
16,283
3,431
5,251
16.6
4.0
0.8
1.3
4
-
-
-

References

  1. ^ Senato della Republica]
  2. ^ In 1958 the City Council was dissolved and Alfredo Correra governed the city as a special commissioner.
  3. ^ For a second time the City Council was dissolved and Ferdinando d'Aiuto governed the city as a special commissioner.
  4. ^ He was elected president of Campania.
  5. ^ [1]
  6. ^ [2]
  7. ^ [3] Italian Ministry of the Interior - 2011.