1964 Italian presidential election

The Italian presidential election of 1964 was held in Italy from 16–28 December 1964, following the resignation of incumbent President Antonio Segni on 6 December 1964 due to health problems.

1964 Italian presidential election

16–28 December 1964

963 voters
(320 Senators, 630 Deputies
and 13 regional representatives[1])
642 or 482 votes needed to win
 
Nominee Giuseppe Saragat Gaetano Martino
Party Social Democratic Party Liberal Party
Electoral vote 646 56
Percentage 67.1% 5.8%

Result on the twenty-first ballot
(28 December 1964)

     Saragat 646      Martino 56      Others 71

     Invalids, blanks, abstentions 190

President before election

Antonio Segni
DC

Elected President

Giuseppe Saragat
PSDI

Only members of Parliament and regional delegates were entitled to vote, most of these electors having been elected in the 1963 general election. As head of state of the Italian Republic, the President has a role of representation of national unity and guarantees that Italian politics comply with the Italian Constitution, in the framework of a parliamentary system.

Only on the twenty-first round of voting Giuseppe Saragat, the leader of Italian Democratic Socialist Party and former President of the Constituent Assembly, was finally elected President.[2] Saragat was the first left-wing politician to become President of the Republic.[3]

Procedure

In accordance to the Italian Constitution, the election was held in the form of a secret ballot, with the Senators and the Deputies entitled to vote. The election was held in the Palazzo Montecitorio, home of the Chamber of Deputies, with the capacity of the building expanded for the purpose. The first three ballots required a two-thirds majority of the 963 voters in order to elect a president, or 642 votes. Starting from the fourth ballot, an absolute majority was required for candidates to be elected, or 482 votes. The presidential mandate lasts seven years.

The election was presided over by the President of the Chamber of Deputies Brunetto Bucciarelli-Ducci, who proceeded to the public counting of the votes, and by the Vice president of the Senate Ennio Zelioli-Lanzini, since President Cesare Merzagora was serving as acting President of the Republic.

Chronology

During summer 1964 the so called Piano Solo prepared by general Giovanni De Lorenzo was conceived to make a coup d'état and overthrow the first centre-left government led by Aldo Moro. The coup was stopped before taking place, as the Italian Socialist Party agreed to reduce its more radical reformist claims. However on 7 August 1964, during a heated discussion with the Prime Minister Moro and the leader of the Italian Democratic Socialist Party Giuseppe Saragat, President Antonio Segni suffered a serious cerebral hemorrhage in his office at the Quirinal Palace. He only partially recovered and decided to resign on 6 December 1964, citing health matters. Cesare Merzagora, as President of the Senate, became the acting President of the Republic till a new presidential election was called.

On 16 December 1964 the Italian Parliament convened to elect the new President after just two years since last presidential election occurred.

The official candidate of Christian Democracy was the former president of the Chamber of Deputies Giovanni Leone, whose candidacy was immediately contrasted by the former Prime Minister Amintore Fanfani, preferred by the left-wing faction of the party. As they did two years before, communists sustained again Umberto Terracini, while socialists decided to vote for the democratic socialist leader Giuseppe Saragat.

As the count advanced, both Leone and Fanfani decided to retire from the race, while socialists and communists found a common ground on the candidacy of the socialist leader and Deputy Prime Minister Pietro Nenni. Christian Democracy couldn't sustain Nenni since it'd have been meant to vote for a candidate voted by the communists themselves and thus finding the opposition of the more conservative social groups of the country.

After almost twenty rounds of voting, Christian Democracy decided to sustain Saragat, a name then married also by socialists and communists. On the twenty-first ballot and after almost two weeks of voting, Giuseppe Saragat was finally elected President by a large margin and sworn in on 29 December 1964.

Results

Candidate First round
16 Dec 1964
Second round
16 Dec 1964
Third round
17 Dec 1964
Fourth round
17 Dec 1964
Fifth round
18 Dec 1964
Sixth round
19 Dec 1964
Seventh round
19 Dec 1964
Eighth round
20 Dec 1964
Ninth round
21 Dec 1964
Giovanni Leone319304298290294278313312305
Umberto Terracini250251253249252249251252250
Giuseppe Saragat140138137138140133138
Gaetano Martino555656545453
Augusto De Marsanich3940403940
Alcide Malagugini34363612
Amintore Fanfani185371117122129132132128
Paolo Emilio Taviani118
Mario Scelba66
Giulio Pastore1318403440
Paolo Rossi3416
Other candidates19143187107133
Blank papers393436282536262217
Invalid papers42212111
Abstentions3025212618162126203
Total963963963963963963963963963
Candidate Tenth round
21 Dec 1964
Eleventh round
22 Dec 1964
Twelfth round
22 Dec 1964
Thirteenth round
23 Dec 1964
Fourteenth round
23 Dec 1964
Fifteenth round
24 Dec 1964
Sixteenth round
25 Dec 1964
Seventeenth round
26 Dec 1964
Giovanni Leone299382401393406386
Umberto Terracini249252250
Giuseppe Saragat6810
Augusto De Marsanich403940
Alcide Malagugini36354240373633
Amintore Fanfani12917
Giulio Pastore40
Paolo Rossi201410
Pietro Nenni9698104351353348349346
Ludovico Montini76
Other candidates2418171410199
Blank papers18100120129120152100103
Invalid papers1461211
Abstentions1165918192828419414
Total963963963963963963963963
Candidate Eighteenth round
26 December 1964
Nineteenth round
27 December 1964
Twentieth round
28 December 1964
Twenty-first round
28 December 1964
Giovanni Leone7
Giuseppe Saragat311342323646
Gaetano Martino60635956
Augusto De Marsanich40394040
Amintore Fanfani13107
Paolo Rossi13877
Pietro Nenni380377385
Other candidates4101124
Blank papers10686100150
Invalid papers514
Abstentions24273136
Total963963963963
Source: Presidency of the Republic

References

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