List of mayors of Turin
The Mayor of Turin is an elected politician who, along with the Turin's City Council of 40 members, is accountable for the government of Turin, Piedmont, northern Italy.
Mayor of Turin | |
---|---|
Residence | Palazzo Civico |
Appointer | Electorate of Turin |
Term length | 5 years, renewable once |
Inaugural holder | Francesco Luigi de Margherita |
Formation | 30 November 1848 |
Deputy | Tom Dealessandri |
Salary | €62,592 |
Website | Official site |
The current Mayor is Chiara Appendino, a member of the Five Star Movement, who took office on 20 June 2016.[1][2][3]
List
Kingdom of Sardinia (1814-1848)
From 1814 to 1848 the City of Turin was administrated by a Decurionato (City Council) led by two annual syndics (sindici).[4]
Syndics | Term start | Term end | Party |
---|---|---|---|
Paolo Mazzetti di Saluggia Giovanni Battista Arbaudi |
1 January 1814 | 31 December 1815 | Legitimist |
Bernardo Ripa di Meana Giulio Marenco di Moriondo |
1 January 1816 | 31 December 1816 | Legitimist |
Michele Provana del Sabbione Saverio Morelli |
1 January 1817 | 31 December 1817 | None |
Agostino Lascaris di Ventimiglia Giuseppe Cavalli |
1 January 1818 | 31 December 1818 | None |
Michele Provana del Sabbione Luigi Bertalazone di San Fermo |
1 January 1819 | 31 December 1819 | None |
Enrico Seyssel d'Aix Giuseppe Sobrero |
1 January 1820 | 31 December 1820 | None |
Luigi Coardi Bagnasco Gaetano Calliani |
1 January 1821 | 31 December 1821 | None |
Giuseppe Provana di Collegno Giuseppe Adami di Bergolo |
1 January 1822 | 31 December 1822 | None |
Domenico Rovero di Piobesi Giuseppe Gaetano Rignon |
1 January 1823 | 31 December 1823 | None |
Carlo Perrone di San Martino Pietro Gay di Quarti |
1 January 1824 | 31 December 1824 | None |
Cesare Romagnano di Virle Edoardo Tholozan |
1 January 1825 | 31 December 1825 | None |
Tancredi Farletti di Barolo Davide Revelly |
1 January 1826 | 31 December 1827 | None |
Giacomo Asinari di Bernezzo Luigi Francesetti di Hautecourt e Mezzenile |
1 January 1828 | 31 December 1828 | None |
Luigi Nomis di Cossilla Luigi Ricciolio |
1 January 1829 | 31 December 1829 | None |
Giuseppe Provana di Collegno Gerolamo Cravosio |
1 January 1830 | 31 December 1831 | None |
Enrico Seyssel d'Aix Ignazio Michelotti |
1 January 1832 | 31 December 1832 | None |
Michele Benso di Cavour Giuseppe Villa |
1 January 1833 | 31 December 1834 | None |
Carlo Pallio di Rinco Luca Martin di San Martino |
1 January 1835 | 31 December 1835 | None |
Luigi Mola di Larissé Giovanni Ignazio Pansoya |
1 January 1836 | 31 December 1836 | None |
Carlo Nicolis di Robilant Amedeo Chiavarina di Rubiana |
1 January 1837 | 31 December 1837 | None |
Carlo Cacherano d'Osasco Giuseppe Bosco di Ruffino |
1 January 1838 | 31 December 1838 | None |
Carlo Galli della Loggia Luigi Rostagno di Villaretto |
1 January 1839 | 31 December 1839 | None |
Giuseppe Pochettini di Serravalle Ignazio Marchetti Melina |
1 January 1840 | 31 December 1840 | None |
Paolo Gazzelli di Rossana Pietro Villanis |
1 January 1841 | 31 December 1841 | None |
Antonio Nomis di Pollone Angelo Borbonese |
1 January 1842 | 31 December 1843 | None |
Cesare Romagnano di Virle Giuseppe Ponte di Pino |
1 January 1844 | 31 December 1844 | None |
Giuseppe Pochettini di Serravalle Giuseppe Bosco di Ruffino |
1 January 1845 | 31 December 1845 | None |
Vittorio Colli di Felizzano Giovanni Nigra |
1 January 1846 | 31 December 1848 | None |
Kingdom of Sardinia (1848–1861)
The office of Mayor of Turin (Sindaco di Torino) was created by the Kingdom of Sardinia in 1848 after the promulgation of the Albertine Statute.[4]
Mayor | Term start | Term end | Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Francesco Luigi de Margherita | 31 December 1848 | 7 April 1849 | Moderate |
2 | Carlo Pinchia | 7 April 1849 | 1 February 1850 | Moderate |
3 | Giorgio Bellono | 1 February 1850 | 1 January 1853 | Moderate |
4 | Giovanni Notta | 1 January 1853 | 3 February 1860 | Moderate |
5 | Augusto Nomis di Cossilla | 3 February 1860 | 26 December 1861 | Moderate |
Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946)
After the creation of the Kingdom of Italy, the Mayor of Turin was elected as continuation of the previous office created during the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia. The Fascist dictatorship abolished mayors and City councils in 1926, replacing them with an authoritarian Podestà chosen by the National Fascist Party. The office of Mayor was restored in 1945 during the Allied occupation.[4]
Mayor | Term start | Term end | Party | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 | Emanuele Luserna di Rorà | 26 December 1861 | 1 January 1866 | Historical Right | |||
7 | Giovanni Filippo Galvagno | 1 January 1866 | 1 April 1869 | Independent | |||
8 | Cesare Valperga di Masino | 1 April 1869 | 20 November 1870 | Historical Right | |||
9 | Felice Rignon | 20 November 1870 | 19 January 1878 | Historical Right | |||
10 | Luigi Ferraris | 19 January 1878 | 28 March 1883 | Historical Right | |||
11 | Ernesto Balbo Bertone di Sambuy | 28 March 1883 | 1 January 1887 | Historical Right | |||
12 | Melchiorre Voli | 1 January 1887 | 26 June 1895 | Historical Left | |||
(9) | Felice Rignon | 26 June 1895 | 13 April 1898 | Historical Right | |||
13 | Severino Casana | 13 April 1898 | 26 September 1902 | Historical Left | |||
14 | Alfonso Badini Confalonieri | 26 September 1902 | 6 July 1903 | Historical Left | |||
15 | Secondo Frola | 6 July 1903 | 28 July 1909 | Historical Right | |||
16 | Teofilo Rossi | 28 July 1909 | 15 June 1917 | Liberal Union | |||
17 | Leopoldo Usseglio | 15 June 1917 | 17 October 1917 | Liberal Union | |||
(15) | Secondo Frola | 17 October 1917 | 19 November 1920 | Liberal Union | |||
18 | Riccardo Cattaneo | 19 November 1920 | 26 June 1925 | Liberal Union | |||
– | Donato Etna | 26 June 1925 | 4 December 1926 | Special Commissioner | |||
Fascist Podestà (1926–1945) | |||||||
– | Luigi Balbo Bertone di Sambuy | 4 December 1926 | 11 September 1928 | Special Commissioner | |||
– | Umberto Ricci | 11 September 1928 | 11 February 1929 | Special Commissioner | |||
1 | Paolo Ignazio Maria Thaon di Revel | 11 February 1929 | 4 February 1935 | PNF | |||
2 | Ugo Sartirana | 4 February 1935 | 25 June 1938 | PNF | |||
3 | Cesare Giovara | 25 June 1938 | 24 August 1939 | PNF | |||
4 | Matteo Bonino | 24 August 1939 | 18 August 1943 | PNF | |||
5 | Bruno Villabruna | 18 August 1943 | 20 September 1943 | PFR | |||
6 | Michele Fassio | 2 December 1944 | 25 April 1945 | PFR | |||
Allied occupation (1945–1946) | |||||||
19 | Giovanni Roveda | 28 April 1945 | 17 December 1946 | PCI | |||
Italian Republic (since 1946)
City Council election (1946-1993)
From 1946 to 1993, the Mayor of Turin was elected by the City Council.[4]
Mayor | Term start | Term end | Party | Coalition | Election | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Celeste Negarville | 17 December 1946 | 13 May 1948 | PCI | PCI • PSI | 1946 |
2 | Domenico Coggiola | 13 May 1948 | 16 July 1951 | PCI | ||
3 | Amedeo Peyron | 16 July 1951 | 26 February 1962 | DC | DC • PLI | 1951 |
1956 | ||||||
1960 | ||||||
4 | Giovanni Carlo Anselmetti | 26 February 1962 | 21 October 1964 | DC | ||
5 | Luciano Jona | 21 October 1964 | 20 February 1965 | PLI | ||
6 | Giuseppe Grosso | 20 February 1965 | 9 September 1968 | DC | 1964 | |
7 | Andrea Guglielminetti | 9 September 1968 | 22 July 1970 | DC | ||
8 | Giovanni Porcellana | 22 July 1970 | 12 April 1973 | DC | DC • PSI • PSDI • PRI (Organic Centre-left) |
1970 |
9 | Guido Secreto | 12 April 1973 | 5 December 1973 | PSDI | ||
10 | Giovanni Picco | 5 December 1973 | 14 July 1975 | DC | ||
11 | Diego Novelli | 14 July 1975 | 25 January 1985 | PCI | PCI • PSI | 1975 |
1980 | ||||||
12 | Giorgio Cardetti | 25 January 1985 | 20 July 1987 | PSI | ||
DC • PSI • PLI • PSDI • PRI (Pentapartito) |
1985 | |||||
13 | Maria Magnani Noya | 20 July 1987 | 30 July 1990 | PSI | ||
14 | Valerio Zanone | 30 July 1990 | 11 February 1992 | PLI | 1990 | |
15 | Giovanna Cattaneo Incisa | 11 February 1992 | 14 December 1992 | PRI | ||
- | Riccardo Malpica | 14 December 1992 | 24 June 1993 | Special prefectural commissioner[lower-alpha 1] | – |
- Notes
- Nominated by the Prefect after the Mayor and the members of the City Council resigned in order to hold a new election under the provision of the new local electoral law.
Direct election (since 1993)
Since 1993, under provisions of new local administration law, the Mayor of Turin is chosen by direct election, originally every four then every five years.
Mayor of Turin | Took office | Left office | Party | Coalition | Election | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 | Valentino Castellani (b. 1940) |
24 June 1993 | 1 June 2001 | Ind | Alliance of Progressives 24 June 1993 – 12 May 1997 |
1993 | ||
The Olive Tree 12 May 1997 – 1 June 2001 |
1997 | |||||||
17 | Sergio Chiamparino (b. 1948) |
1 June 2001 | 16 May 2011 | DS PD |
The Olive Tree 1 June 2001 – 1 June 2006 |
2001 | ||
The Olive Tree 1 June 2006 – 16 May 2011 |
2006 | |||||||
18 | Piero Fassino (b. 1949) |
16 May 2011 | 20 June 2016 | PD | PD • SEL • IdV 16 May 2011 – 20 June 2016 |
2011 | ||
19 | Chiara Appendino (b. 1984) |
20 June 2016 | Incumbent | M5S | M5S Since 20 June 2016 |
2016 |
Timeline
Elections
Mayoral and Council election, 1993
The election took place in two rounds: the first on 21 November and the second on 5 December
The main candidates were Diego Novelli, former mayor of Turin supported by The Network and the Communist Refoundation Party, and Valentino Castellani, supported by the Democratic Party of the Left, Democratic Alliance and the Federation of the Greens.
Turin Mayoral Election Results 1997 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Party | 1st Round (21 November) | % | 2nd Round (5 December) | % | |||
Valentino Castellani (Centre-left) | Independent | 122.423 | 20,3 | 280.092 | 57,3 | |||
Diego Novelli (Left) | The Network | 217.506 | 36,1 | 208.596 | 42,7 |
Mayoral and Council election, 1997
The election took place in two rounds: the first on 27 April and the second on 11 May
The main candidates were Raffaele Costa, supported by Silvio Berlusconi's coalition Pole of Freedoms and by some Christian-democratic parties, and the outgoing mayor Valentino Castellani, supported by Romano Prodi's coalition The Olive Tree.
Turin Mayoral Election Results 1997 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Party | 1st Round (6 June) | % | 2nd Round (20 June) | % | |||
Valentino Castellani (Centre-left) | Independent | 196.306 | 35,4 | 272.711 | 50,4 | |||
Raffaele Costa (Centre-right) | Forza Italia | 240.250 | 43,2 | 268.002 | 49,6 |
Mayoral and Council election, 2001
The election took place in two rounds: the first on 13 May and the second on 27 May 2001.
The main candidates were Roberto Rosso, supported by Silvio Berlusconi's center-right coalition, and Sergio Chiamparino, supported by Francesco Rutelli's center-left coalition The Olive Tree.
Turin Mayoral Election Results 2001 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Party | 1st Round (13 May) | % | 2nd Round (27 May) | % | |||
Sergio Chiamparino (Centre-left) | Democrats of the Left | 269.152 | 44,9 | 285.997 | 52,8 | |||
Roberto Rosso (Centre-right) | Forza Italia | 266.218 | 44,4 | 255.444 | 47,2 |
Mayoral and Council election, 2006
The election took place on 29–30 May 2006.
The main candidates were the incumbent mayor Sergio Chiamparino, supported by Romano Prodi's coalition The Olive Tree, and the minister Rocco Buttiglione, from the centrist party UDC and supported by Silvio Berlusconi's coalition House of Freedom.
Chiamparino won the election with the 66% of the votes.
Turin Mayoral Election Results 2006 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Party | 1st Round (29–30 May) | % | |||||
Sergio Chiamparino (Centre-left) | Democrats of the Left | 307.913 | 66,6 | |||||
Rocco Buttiglione (Centre-right) | Union of the Centre | 136.134 | 29,5 |
Mayoral and Council election, 2011
The election took place on 15–16 May
The main candidates were the Michele Coppola, from Silvio Berlusconi's party People of Freedom, and the Piero Fassino, from Democratic Party. Fassino was chosen as the candidate for the center-left coalition on 26 February 2011 with the coalition primary elections.[5]
Michele Coppola was supported by a big center-right coalition, composed by People of Freedom, Lega Nord, The Right – Tricolour Flame and some civic lists. Piero Fassino was supported by Democratic Party, Left Ecology Freedom, Italy of Values and some civic lists.
Turin Mayoral Election Results 2011 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Party | 1st Round (15–16 May) | % | |||||
Piero Fassino | Democratic Party | 255.242 | 56,66 | |||||
Michele Coppola | People of Freedom | 122.981 | 27,30 |
Turin Council Election 2011 – Parties[6] | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coalition | votes | % | seats | Party | votes | % | seats | |
Center-left (Fassino) | 226,147 | 56.5 | 24 | Democratic Party Left Ecology Freedom Italy of Values Civic Lists (5) | 138,103 22,647 19,055 46,342 | 34.5 5.6 4.8 11.6 | 16 2 2 4 | |
Center-right (Coppola) | 107,439 | 26.8 | 10 | People of Freedom Lega Nord The Right Pensioner's Party Alliance of the Centre Civic Lists (3) | 73,197 27,451 2,396 1,868 740 1,787 | 18.3 6.8 0.6 0.5 0.2 0.4 | 7 3 – – – – |
Mayoral and Council election, 2016
The election took place in two rounds: the first on 5 June and the second on 19 June.
The main candidates were the incumbent mayor Piero Fassino, from Democratic Party, Chiara Appendino, from Five Star Movement, Alberto Morano, supported by Northern League and Brothers of Italy, Osvaldo Napoli, from Forza Italia, and Giorgio Airaudo, from Italian Left.
On the first round Fassino was ahead with the 41% of the votes, but then Appendino won the second round with the 54% of the votes.
Turin Mayoral Election Results 2016 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Party | 1st Round (5 June) | % | 2nd Round (19 June) | % | |||
Chiara Appendino | Five Star Movement | 118.273 | 30,92 | 202.764 | 54,56 | |||
Piero Fassino | Democratic Party | 160.023 | 41,84 | 168.880 | 45,44 |
Turin Council Election 2016 - Parties | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coalition | votes | % | seats | Party | votes | % | seats | |
Five Star Movement (Appendino) | 118.273 | 30,92 | 24 | Five Star Movement | 107,680 | 30.01 | 24 | |
Center-left (Fassino) | 160.023 | 41,84 | 6 | Democratic Party Moderates Civic List (1) | 106,818 21,307 14,898 | 29.77 5.94 4.15 | 8 1 1 |
See also
References
- "Chiara Appendino". Retrieved 22 June 2019.
- "Elezioni comunali del 19 giugno 2016 - ballottaggio - Comune di TORINO" (in Italian). Ministry of Interior. 20 June 2016. Archived from the original on 20 June 2016.
- "Chiara Appendino è sindaco: svolta storica per Torino. In due settimane è cresciuta di 80 mila voti". La Stampa (in Italian). 20 June 2016. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
- Davide Giovanni Cravero, Trecento anni di vita del Palazzo Civico di Torino: 1663–1963, Published by the City of Turin, 1964, available online here
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 May 2011. Retrieved 6 June 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Italian Ministry of the Interior – 2011.
Notes
- it:Sindaci di Torino (since 1564)
- Davide Giovanni Cravero, Trecento anni di vita del Palazzo Civico di Torino: 1663–1963, Published by the City of Turin, 1964, available online here
- Photo Gallery of the mayors of Turin 1945–2005