Mayor of Palermo
Sindaco di Palermo
Incumbent
Roberto Lagalla
since 20 June 2022
ResidencePalazzo Pretorio
AppointerPopular election
Term length5 years, renewable once
Inaugural holderSalesio Balsano
FormationJuly 1861
Salary€121,188
WebsiteOfficial website

The mayor of Palermo is an elected politician who, along with the Palermo's city council, is accountable for the strategic government of Palermo in Sicily, Italy. The current mayor is Roberto Lagalla, who took office on 20 June 2022.[1]

Overview

Palermo's City Hall

According to the Italian Constitution, the mayor of Palermo is a member of the Palermo city council.

The mayor is elected by the population of Palermo. Citizens elect also the members of the city council, which also controls the mayor's policy guidelines and is able to enforce his resignation by a motion of no confidence. The mayor is entitled to appoint and release the members of his government.

Since 1993 the mayor has been elected directly by Palermo's electorate: in all mayoral elections in Italy in cities with a population higher than 15,000 the voters express a direct choice for the mayor or an indirect choice voting for the party of the candidate's coalition. If no candidate receives at least 50% of votes, the top two candidates go to a second round after two weeks. The election of the city council is based on a direct choice for the candidate with a preference vote: the candidate with the majority of the preferences is elected. The number of the seats for each party is determined proportionally.

Kingdom of Italy (1861–1946)

Mayors

In 1861, the nascent Kingdom of Italy created the office of the mayor of Palermo (Italian: Sindaco di Palermo), chosen by the city council.

  • 1861-1862, Salesio Balsano
  • 1862-1863, Mariano Stabile
  • 1863-1866, Antonio Starabba, Marchese di Rudinì
  • 1866-1868, Salesio Balsano
  • 1868-1873, Domenico Peranni
  • 1873-1876, Emanuale Notarbartolo
  • 1876-1878, Francesco Paolo Perez
  • 1878-1880, Giovanni Raffaele
  • 1880-1881, Salesio Balsano
  • 1881-1882, Nicolò Turrisi Colonna
  • 1882-1885, Pietro Ugo Delle Favare
  • 1885, Salvatore Romano Lo Faso
  • 1885, Giuseppe La Farina
  • 1885, Fortunato Vergara di Craco
  • 1885-1886, Giulio Benso della Verdura
  • 1886-1887, Nicolò Turrisi Colonna
  • 1887-1890, Giulio Benso della Verdura
  • 1890-1892, Emanuele Paternò
  • 1892-1893, Pietro Ugo Delle Favare
  • 1893-1895, Eugenio Olivieri
  • 1895-1897, Angelo Pantaleone
  • 1897-1898, Michele Amato Pojero
  • 1898-1900, Eugenio Olivieri
  • 1900, Mario Rebucci
  • 1900-1901, Paolo Beccadelli di Bologna
  • 1901-1902, Giuseppe Tasca Lanza
  • 1902, Pietro Vayrat
  • 1902-1903, Giuseppe Tasca Lanza
  • 1903-1905, Pietro Bonanno
  • 1905-1906, Girolamo di Martino
  • 1906-1907, Giuseppe Tasca Lanza
  • 1907-1908, Paolo Francesco Tesauro
  • 1908-1909, Gennaro Bladier
  • 1909-1910, Romualdo Trigona di Sant'Elia
  • 1910, Francesco Moncada Grispo
  • 1910-1911, Francesco Gay
  • 1911-1912, Girolamo Di Martino
  • 1912-1914, Vincenzo Di Salvo
  • 1914-1920, Salvatore Tagliavia
  • 1920-1924, Giuseppe Lanza di Scalea
  • 1924-1925, Gennaro Di Donato
  • 1925, Domenico Delli Santi
  • 1925-1926, Salvatore Di Marzo

Fascist Podestà

The Fascist dictatorship abolished mayors and city councils in 1926, replacing them with an authoritarian Podestà chosen by the National Fascist Party:

  • 1926-1929, Salvatore Di Marzo
  • 1929-1933, Michele Spadafora
  • 1933-1934, prefectural dictator Giuseppe Borrelli
  • 1934-1939, Giuseppe Noto
  • 1939-1943, Giuseppe Sofia
  • 1943-1946, some special commissioners (Allied invasion of Sicily)

Republic of Italy (1946–present)

From 1946 to 1993, the mayor of Palermo was chosen by the city council.

  Mayor Term start Term end Party Coalition
1 Gennaro Patricolo November 1946 March 1948 UQ UQ   PLI
2 Guido Avolio March 1948 November 1948 UQ DC   PRI   PLI   UQ
3 Gaspare Causenza November 1948 March 1951 DC DC   PRI   PLI
(2) Guido Avolio November 1951 January 1952 DC
4 Gioacchino Scaduto July 1952 December 1955 DC
5 Luciano Maugeri June 1956 May 1958 DC
6 Salvatore Lima June 1958 January 1963 DC
7 Francesco Saverio Diliberto January 1963 June 1964 DC
8 Paolo Bevilacqua July 1964 January 1965 DC
(6) Salvatore Lima January 1965 July 1966 DC
(8) Paolo Bevilacqua July 1966 October 1968 DC
9 Francesco Spagnolo October 1968 November 1970 DC DC
10 Vito Ciancimino November 1970 April 1971 DC DC   PRI   PLI
11 Giacomo Marchello April 1971 January 1976 DC
12 Carmelo Scoma January 1976 October 1978 DC
13 Giovanni Lapi October 1978 November 1978 DC
14 Salvatore Mantione November 1978 July 1980 DC
15 Nello Martellucci July 1980 April 1983 DC
16 Elda Pucci April 1983 April 1984 DC DC   PSI   PRI   PLI
17 Giuseppe Insalaco April 1984 August 1984 DC
18 Stefano Camilleri August 1984 October 1984 DC
(15) Nello Martellucci October 1984 December 1984 DC
19 Leoluca Orlando July 1985 August 1990 DC
20 Domenico Lo Vasco August 1990 June 1992 DC
21 Aldo Rizzo June 1992 December 1992 SI PDS   FdV   PSDI   SI
22 Manlio Orobello December 1992 April 1993 PSI DC   PSI   PRI   PLI

Direct election (since 1993)

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


Mayor of Palermo Took office Left office Party Coalition Election
(19) Leoluca Orlando
(b. 1947)
3 December 1993 5 December 1997 LR Progressives
(PDS-PRC-LR-FdV)
1993
6 December 1997 18 December 2000[lower-alpha 1] The Olive Tree
(PDS-PPI-PRC-LR-FdV)
1997
Special Commissioner tenure (19 December 2000 – 4 December 2001)
23 Diego Cammarata
(b. 1951)
5 December 2001 14 May 2007 FI
PdL
House of Freedoms
(FI-AN-CCD-CDU)
2001
15 May 2007 26 January 2012 House of Freedoms
(FI-AN-UDC)
2007
Special Commissioner tenure (27 January – 22 May 2012)
(19) Leoluca Orlando
(b. 1947)
22 May 2012 22 June 2017 LR18
PD
IdV   FdS   FdV
and leftist lists
2012
22 June 2017 20 June 2022 PD   SI   PRC
and leftist lists
2017
24 Roberto Lagalla
(b. 1955)
20 June 2022 Incumbent UDC FI   FdI   IV   L   UDC 2022
Notes
  1. Resigned in order to participate in the 2001 regional election.

See also

References

  1. "Sindaci e commissari dal 1861 a oggi". Comune di Palermo. 22 May 2012. Archived from the original on 5 June 2012. Retrieved 23 May 2012.

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