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President of Italy

Head of state of Italy

President of Italy

Head of state of Italy

FieldValue
postPresident
bodythe Italian Republic
native_name*Presidente della Repubblica Italiana*
insigniasize110
insigniacaptionPresidential cipher
flagFlag of the President of Italy.svg
flagsize120px
flagcaptionPresidential standard
imageSergio Mattarella Presidente della Repubblica Italiana.jpg
incumbentSergio Mattarella
incumbentsince3 February 2015
styleMr President (informal)
His Excellency (diplomatic)
statusHead of state
Commander-in-chief
appointerItalian Parliament
and regional representatives
member_ofHigh Council of Defence
High Council of the Judiciary
residenceQuirinal Palace
termlengthSeven years,
termlength_qualifiedrenewable
constituting_instrumentConstitution of Italy (1948)
deputyPresident of the Italian Senate
inauguralEnrico De Nicola
formation
salary€230,000 annually
website
Note

Monogramma Repubblica Italiana.png His Excellency (diplomatic) Commander-in-chief and regional representatives High Council of the Judiciary

The president of Italy, officially titled President of the Italian Republic (), is the head of state of Italy. In that role, the president represents national unity and guarantees that Italian politics comply with the Constitution. The president is the commander-in-chief of the Italian Armed Forces and chairs the High Council of the Judiciary. The president serves a seven-year term, with no term limits. The incumbent president is former constitutional judge Sergio Mattarella, who was elected on 31 January 2015, and re-elected on 29 January 2022.

Qualifications for office

The framers of the Constitution of Italy intended for the president to be an elder statesman of some stature. Article 84 states that any Italian citizen who is fifty or older on election day and enjoys civil and political rights can be elected president. The article also states that the presidency is incompatible with any other office; therefore, the president-elect must resign any other position before being sworn in.

The 1948 Constitution sets the presidential term at seven years. It does not put any term limit on the presidency, although until 2013 no president ever ran for a second term. On 20 April 2013, President Giorgio Napolitano agreed to run for a second term in an attempt to break the parliamentary deadlock in the 2013 presidential elections and was duly reelected the same day. However, he made it clear that he would not serve his full term and resigned in January 2015.

Election

Main article: Italian presidential elections

The president of the Italian Republic is elected by an electoral college, consisting of the members of both chambers of the Italian Parliament, and 58 special electors appointed by the regions.

Electoral bodyType of membersNumber of membersComments
Chamber of Deputieselected Deputies400
Senate of the Republicelected Senators200
appointed Senators for lifeup to 5the President appoints up to five Senators; before 2020 the number could vary somewhat
former Presidents of the Republicunlimitedall former Presidents serve ex officio, unless they resign
RegionsSpecial Electors58each regional council appoints three electors, except for Aosta Valley, which due to its small size only appoints one
Total658–663 + former presidents

Prior to the 2020 Italian constitutional referendum, which reduced the number of elected parliament members, the electoral college was much larger, with 1,009 members participating in the 2022 election.

According to the Constitution, the election must be held by a secret ballot, with the senators, deputies and regional representatives all being required to vote. A two-thirds vote is required to elect on any of the first three rounds of balloting; after that, a simple majority suffices. The number of rounds has often been large thanks to the secret ballot and fragmented nature of the Italian Parliament. The election is presided over by the president of the Chamber of Deputies, who calls for the public counting of the votes. The vote is held in the Palazzo Montecitorio, seat of the Chamber of Deputies, which is expanded and re-configured for the event.

There is no formal personal candidacy but only proposals from groups within the electoral college or from groups of citizens, so any citizen may be voted or elected, regardless of any expressed intention to be a candidate.

Members of the electoral college, mostly being part of political parties, can make public or undisclosed agreements between each other on a name to vote as a candidate, but the votes during the ballot remain secret as only the candidate's name is revealed but not the voter who wrote it so it's not always clear, especially to the public, if such agreements are there and if a party or a group of voters actually comply with them during a ballot.

For these reasons, during the ballots, there could be votes for public figures not related to politics (actors, singers, soccer players for example or even fictitious characters) or non-feasible candidates. Those kinds of votes are not fully beyond a political strategy, considering they're secret and that the first ballots require a larger winning majority. They may be used to express discontent about the potential actual candidates, to test or show if a candidate is willing to become president at that moment, to spoil secondary candidates in order to increase interest in main candidates for future ballots, to spoil a potential candidate of the adversary party at the first ballots or to let other parties express their more interesting candidates before a potential winning ballot.

Often a successful vote is reached when the major political parties within the chambers reached an agreement on a willing candidate before that final ballot and their members comply with such agreement during the vote.

Presidential mandate

Second inauguration of Sergio Mattarella in front of the Italian Parliament on 3 February 2022

The president of the Italian Republic assumes office after taking an oath before the Italian Parliament and delivering a presidential address.

The presidential term lasts seven years. This prevents any officeholder from being reelected by the same houses, which have a five-year mandate, also granting some freedom from excessive political ties to the appointing body. The president's term may end prematurely by voluntary resignation, death in office, permanent disability due to serious illness, or impeachment and conviction for the crimes of high treason or attack on the Constitution.

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A former president of the Republic is called president emeritus of the Republic and becomes Senator for life ex officio. In the absence of the president of the Republic, including travel abroad, presidential functions are performed by the president of the Senate.

Succession

Standard of the Substitute President of the Republic

According to Article 86 of the Constitution, in all the cases in which the president is unable to perform the functions of the office, these shall be performed by the president of the Senate, who would temporarily serve as acting president of Italy.

In the event of permanent incapacity, death in office or resignation of the president, the president of the Chamber of Deputies shall call an election of a new president within fifteen days, notwithstanding the longer term envisaged during the dissolution of the Parliament or in the three months preceding dissolution.

Residence

Quirinal Palace, the principal residence of the president

The officeholder resides in Rome at the Quirinal Palace and also has at his disposal the presidential holdings of Castelporziano, near Rome and Villa Rosebery in Naples. The residence at the Quirinal is guarded by the Corazzieri, an elite cuirassier honor guard that is part of the Carabinieri and has its historical roots in the guards of the House of Savoy.

Timeline

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References

References

  1. (2 February 2012). "Roman Austerity: Parliamentary Salary Cuts a Drop in the Bucket". Spiegel Online International.
  2. "The Italian Constitution". The official website of the Presidency of the Italian Republic..
  3. (31 January 2015). "Italy elects senior judge Sergio Mattarella as president". Reuters.
  4. Reguly, Eric. (29 January 2022). "Italy ends voting deadlock by re-electing Sergio Mattarella as president, keeping Mario Draghi as prime minister". The Globe and Mail.
  5. (2013-04-20). "President Giorgio Napolitano re-elected". BBC News.
  6. James., Newell. (2010). "The politics of Italy: governance in a normal country". Cambridge University Press.
  7. "DPR 17 May 2001. 'Insegna distintiva degli ex Presidenti della Repubblica.' - Published on the Gazzetta Ufficiale n° 117, 22 May 2001.".
  8. Donald, M. Hancock. (2014-02-27). "Politics in Europe.". CQ Press.
  9. Donadio, Rachel. (2013-04-24). "Italian President Nominates New Prime Minister". The New York Times.
  10. (28 May 2018). "In Italy, Populists' Bid To Form Government Fails After Presidential Veto".
  11. web, Segretariato generale della Presidenza della Repubblica-Servizio sistemi informatici- reparto. "The residences: The Castelporziano Presidential Estate".
  12. web, Segretariato generale della Presidenza della Repubblica-Servizio sistemi informatici- reparto. "Villa Rosebery – The Park".
  13. web, Segretariato generale della Presidenza della Repubblica-Servizio sistemi informatici- reparto. "the Italian Corps of Cuirassiers".
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