Senate of the Republic

Senato della Repubblica
19th legislature (list)
Type
Type
Leadership
Ignazio La Russa, FdI
since 13 October 2022
Vice Presidents
Licia Ronzulli (FI)
Gian Marco Centinaio (Lega)
Anna Rossomando (PD)
Maria Domenica Castellone (M5S)
since 19 October 2022
Structure
Seats205 (200 elected + 5 senators for life)
Political groups
Government (116)
  •   FdI (63)
  •   LegaPSd'Az (29)
  •   FI (18)
  •   CdI–NM–MAIE (6)[lower-alpha 1]

Opposition (89)

Elections
Parallel voting: 74 FPTP seats, 126 PR seats with 3% electoral threshold (D'Hondt method)
Last election
25 September 2022
Next election
no later than 2027
Meeting place
Palazzo Madama, Rome
Website
www.senato.it/home

The Senate of the Republic (Italian: Senato della Repubblica), or simply the Senate (Italian: Senato), is the upper house of the bicameral Italian Parliament (the other being the Chamber of Deputies). The two houses together form a perfect bicameral system, meaning they perform identical functions, but do so separately. Pursuant to the Articles 57, 58, and 59 of the Italian Constitution, the Senate has 200 elective members, of which 196 are elected from Italian constituencies, and 4 from Italian citizens living abroad. Furthermore, there is a small number (currently 6) of senators for life (senatori a vita), either appointed or ex officio. It was established in its current form on 8 May 1948, but previously existed during the Kingdom of Italy as Senato del Regno (Senate of the Kingdom), itself a continuation of the Senato Subalpino (Subalpine Senate) of Sardinia established on 8 May 1848. Members of the Senate are styled Senator or The Honourable Senator (Italian: Onorevole Senatore)[1] and they meet at Palazzo Madama, Rome.

Composition

Number of senators assigned to each Region before 2020.

Article 57 of the Constitution of Italy originally established that the Senate of the Republic was to be elected on a regional basis by Italian citizens aged 25 or older (unlike the Chamber of the Deputies, which was elected on a national basis and by all Italian citizens aged 18 or older). No region could have less than 7 senators, except for the two smallest regions: Aosta Valley (1 senator) and Molise (2 senators). From 2006 to 2020, 6 out of 315 senators (and 12 out of 630 deputies) were elected by Italians residing abroad.

After two constitutional amendments were passed respectively in 2020 (by constitutional referendum) and 2021, however, there have been changes. The Senate is still elected on a regional basis, but the number of senators was reduced from 315 to 200, who are now elected by all citizens aged 18 or older, just like deputies (themselves being reduced from 630 to 400). Italians residing abroad now elect 4 senators (and 8 deputies).

The remaining 196 senators are assigned to each region proportionally according to their population. The amended Article 57 of the Constitution provides that no region can have fewer than 3 senators representing it, barring Aosta Valley and Molise, which retained 1 and 2 senators respectively.

Region Seats Region Seats Region Seats
 Abruzzo 4  Friuli Venezia Giulia 4  Sardinia 5
 Aosta Valley 1  Lazio 18  Sicily 16
 Apulia 13  Liguria 5  Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol 6
 Basilicata 3  Lombardy 31  Tuscany 12
 Calabria 6  Marche 5  Umbria 3
 Campania 18  Molise 2  Veneto 16
 Emilia-Romagna 14  Piedmont 14 Overseas constituencies 4

The senators for life are composed of former presidents of the Italian Republic who hold office ex officio, and up to five citizens who are appointed by Presidents of Italy "for outstanding merits in the social, scientific, artistic or literary field". The current life senators are:[2]

Senator for life Appointment Since Parliamentary group
Mario Monti
Economist, Former Prime Minister
Appointed by Giorgio Napolitano 9 November 2011 Mixed Group
Elena Cattaneo
Professor of pharmacology
30 August 2013 For the Autonomies
Renzo Piano
Pritzker Prize-winning architect
Mixed Group
Carlo Rubbia
Nobel Prize-winning particle physicist and inventor
For the Autonomies
Liliana Segre
Holocaust survivor
Appointed by Sergio Mattarella 19 January 2018 Mixed Group

The current term of the Senate is five years, except for senators for life that hold their office for their lifetime. Until a Constitutional change on 9 February 1963, the Senate was elected for six-year terms. The Senate may be dissolved before the expiration of its normal term by the president of the Republic (e.g. when no government can obtain a majority).

Electoral system and election of the Senate

According to article 58 of the Italian constitution, Italian citizens aged 18 onwards (until 2021 25 years) are enabled to vote for the Senate.[3]

The electoral system is a parallel voting system, with 37% of seats allocated using first-past-the-post voting (FPTP) and 63% using proportional representation, allocated with the largest remainder method, with one round of voting.

  • The 200 elected senators are elected in:
    • 74 in single-member constituencies, by plurality;
    • 122 in multi-member constituencies, by regional proportional representation;
    • 4 in multi-member abroad constituencies, by constituency proportional representation.

For Italian residents, each house members are elected by single ballots, including the constituency candidate and his/her supporting party lists. In each single-member constituency the deputy/senator is elected on a plurality basis, while the seats in multi-member constituencies will be allocated nationally. In order to be calculated in single-member constituency results, parties need to obtain at least 1% of the national vote. In order to receive seats in multi-member constituencies, parties need to obtain at least 3% of the national vote. Elects from multi-member constituencies will come from closed lists. The single voting paper, containing both first-past-the-post candidates and the party lists, shows the names of the candidates to single-member constituencies and, in close conjunction with them, the symbols of the linked lists for the proportional part, each one with a list of the relative candidates.

Voters can cast their votes in three different ways:

  • Drawing a sign on the symbol of a list: in this case the vote extends to the candidate in the single-member constituency which is supported by that list.
  • Drawing a sign on the name of the candidate of the single-member constituency and another one on the symbol of one list that supports them: the result is the same as that described above; it is not allowed, under penalty of annulment, the panachage, so the voter can not vote simultaneously for a candidate in the FPTP constituency and for a list which is not linked to them.
  • Drawing a sign only on the name of the candidate for the FPTP constituency, without indicating any list: in this case, the vote is valid for the candidate in the single-member constituency and also automatically extended to the list that supports them; if that candidate is however connected to several lists, the vote is divided proportionally between them, based on the votes that each one has obtained in that constituency.

Reform proposals

In 2016, the Italian Parliament passed a constitutional law that "effectively abolishes the Senate as an elected chamber and sharply restricts its ability to veto legislation".[4] The law was rejected on 4 December 2016 by a referendum, leaving the Senate unchanged.[5]

Membership

The membership of the Senate following the 2022 Italian general election:

Coalition Party Seats %
Centre-right coalition Brothers of Italy (FdI) 66 32.0
Lega 29 14.1
Forza Italia (FI) 18 8.7
Us Moderates (NM) 2 1.0
Total seats 115 55.8
Centre-left coalition Democratic Party – IDP (PD–IDP) 40 19.4
Greens–Left (AVS) 4 1.9
Total seats 44 21.4
Five Star Movement (M5S) 28 13.6
Action – Italia Viva (A–IV) 9 4.4
South Tyrolean People's PartyPATT (SVP–PATT) 2 1.0
South calls North (ScN) 1 0.5
Associative Movement of Italians Abroad (MAIE) 1 0.5
Senators for life 6 2.9
Total 206 100
Popular vote (S)
CDX
44.02%
CSX
25.99%
M5S
15.55%
A–IV
7.73%
Others
6.71%
Distribution of the 200 elective parliamentary seats (S)
CDX
57.5%
CSX
22.0%
M5S
14.0%
A–IV
4.5%
Others
2.0%

Presidents

Under the current Constitution, the Senate must hold its first sitting no later than 20 days after a general election. That session, presided by the oldest senator, proceeds to elect the president of the Senate for the following parliamentary period. On the first two attempts at voting, an absolute majority of all senators is needed; if a third round is needed, a candidate can be elected by an absolute majority of the senators present and voting. If this third round fails to produce a winner, a final ballot is held between the two senators with the highest votes in the previous ballot. In the case of a tie, the elder senator is deemed the winner.

In addition to overseeing the business of the chamber, chairing and regulating debates, deciding whether motions and bills are admissible, representing the Senate, etc., the president of the Senate stands in for the president of the Republic when the latter is unable to perform the duties of the office; in this case the Senate is headed by a vice president.[6]

The current president of the Senate is Ignazio La Russa.

Name Period Legislature
Ivanoe Bonomi (PSDI) 8 May 1948 – 20 April 1951 I
Enrico De Nicola (PLI) 28 April 1951 – 24 June 1952
Giuseppe Paratore (PLI) 26 June 1952 – 24 March 1953
Meuccio Ruini (Independent) 25 March 1953 – 25 June 1953
Cesare Merzagora (Independent) 25 June 1953 – 7 November 1967 II, III, IV
Ennio Zelioli-Lanzini (DC) 8 November 1967 – 4 June 1968 IV
Amintore Fanfani (DC) 5 June 1968 – 26 June 1973 V, VI
Giovanni Spagnolli (DC) 27 June 1973 – 4 July 1976 VI
Amintore Fanfani (DC) 5 July 1976 – 1 December 1982 VII, VIII
Tommaso Morlino (DC) 9 December 1982 – 6 May 1983 VIII
Vittorino Colombo (DC) 12 May 1983 – 11 July 1983
Francesco Cossiga (DC) 12 July 1983 – 24 June 1985 IX
Amintore Fanfani (DC) 9 July 1985 – 17 April 1987
Giovanni Malagodi (PLI) 22 April 1987 – 1 July 1987
Giovanni Spadolini (PRI) 2 July 1987 – 14 April 1994 X, XI
Carlo Scognamiglio (FI) 16 April 1994 – 8 May 1996 XII
Nicola Mancino (PPI) 9 May 1996 – 30 May 2001 XIII
Marcello Pera (FI) 30 May 2001 – 27 April 2006 XIV
Franco Marini (PD) 29 April 2006 – 28 April 2008 XV
Renato Schifani (PdL) 29 April 2008 – 14 March 2013 XVI
Pietro Grasso (PD) 16 March 2013 – 22 March 2018 XVII
Elisabetta Casellati (FI) 24 March 2018 – 13 October 2022 XVIII
Ignazio La Russa (FdI) 13 October 2022 – Incumbent XIX

Historical composition

Since 1994

  PRC
  PdCI/IcU
  PDS/DS
  PSI
  FdV
  NPSI
  AD
  LR
  IdV
  DL
  RI
  PPI
  UDEUR
  VdA
  SVP
  Others
  PS
  CCD+CDU/UDC
  LN
  FI
  AN
1994
18 76 9 7 6 6 1 3 4 31 12 34 60 48
1996
10 102 14 1 11 27 1 2 4 25 48 27 43
2001
4 2 64 8 1 1 43 1 1 3 14 29 82 17 45
2006
27 11 65 4 43 3 3 3 21 80 14 41
  SEL
  AVS
  LeU
  PD
  M5S
  A–IV
  IdV
  SC
  VdA
  SVP
  Others
  UdC
  NM
  MpA
  PdL/FI
  LN/LSP
  FdI
2008
118 14 1 4 1 3 2 147 25
2013
7 111 54 19 1 4 3 98 18
2018
4 53 112 1 3 9 57 58 18
2022
4 40 28 9 2 2 2 18 30 65

Palazzo Madama

Palazzo Madama as it appeared in 17th century
Palazzo Madama today

Since 1871, the Senate has met in Palazzo Madama in Rome, an old patrician palace completed in 1505 for the Medici family. The palace takes its name from Madama Margherita of Austria, daughter of Charles V and wife of Alessandro de' Medici. After the extinction of the Medici, the palace was handed over to the House of Lorraine. and, later, it was sold to Papal Government.

Later, in 1755, Pope Benedict XIV (whose coat of arms still dominates the main entrance) ordered major restructuring, entrusting the work to Luigi Hostini. In the following years there were installed the court offices and police headquarters. In 1849, Pius IX moved the Ministries of Finances and of the Public Debt here, as well as the Papal Post Offices. After the conquest of Rome by the newly formed Kingdom of Italy, the palace was chosen to become the seat of the Senato del Regno (Senate of the Kingdom).

Cicero Denounces Catiline

Palazzo Madama and the adjacent buildings underwent further restructuring and adaptation in the first decades of the 20th century. A radical transformation which involved, among other things, the modernization of the hemicycle, the full remaking of the prospectus on Via San Salvatore and Via Dogana Vecchia, and the establishment of a connection with the adjacent Palazzo Carpegna. The latter, owned by the Senate, was entirely rebuilt in an advanced position compared to its original position. The small church of San Salvatore in Thermis, dating to the 6th century, which stood in the street to the left of the palace, was first closed, expropriated and later razed for security reasons.

The current façade was built in the mid-1650s by both Cigoli and Paolo Maruccelli. The latter added the ornate cornice and whimsical decorative urns on the roof. Among the rooms one of the most significant (and perhaps the most impressive from the political point of view) is the "Sala Maccari," which takes its name from Cesare Maccari, the artist who decorated it in 1880 and created the frescoes, among which stands out the one that depicts Cicero making his indictment of Catiline, who listens isolated.

The chamber where the Senate met for the first time on 27 November 1871 was designed by Luigi Gabet. A plaque on the wall behind the speaker's chair commemorates the king's address to Parliament when first convened in the new seat of government:

L'ITALIA È RESTITVITA A SE STESSA E A
ROMA • QVI E' DOVE NOI RICONOSCIAMO LA
PATRIA DEI NOSTRI PENSIERI; OGNI COSA
CI PARLA DI GRANDEZZA MA NEL TEMPO
STESSO OGNI COSA CI RICORDA I NOSTRI
DOVERI •
VITTORIO EMANVELE II
27 NOVEMBRE MDCCCLXXI

"Italy is restored to herself and to Rome... Here, where we recognise the homeland of our thoughts, all things speak to us of greatness; but at the same time all things remind us of our duties..." - Victor Emmanuel II, 27 November 1871

Above this has been placed a plaque bearing the inscription:

IL 2 GIUGNO 1946
PER SUFFRAGIO DI POPOLO
A PRESIDIO DI PUBBLICHE LIBERTÀ
E A CERTEZZA DI PROGRESSO CIVILE
FU PROCLAMATA
LA REPUBBLICA ITALIANA
On 2 June 1946
by popular suffrage
in defence of public liberty
and a certainty of civic progress
was proclaimed
the Italian Republic

To the viewers' left stand the flags of the Italian Republic (with a ribbon embroidered with the words SENATO DELLA REPUBBLICA) and the European Union.

See also

Notes

    •   SI (2)
    •   EV (1)
    •   Ind. (1)

    References

    1. "onorevole [o-no-ré-vo-le] agg., s." Corriere della Sera. Dizionario di Italiano (in Italian). Retrieved 15 June 2020.
    2. "Senatori a vita, XVIII Legislatura (dal 23 marzo 2018)" [Senators for life, 18th Legislature (since 23 March 2018)]. Senato.it (in Italian). Retrieved 15 June 2020.
    3. "Constitute". Constituteproject.org. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
    4. "Italy passes Renzi's flagship reform, opening way for referendum". Reuters. 12 April 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
    5. "Referendum costituzionale 2016: vince il No. I pro e contro della riforma" [Constitutional referendum 2016: "No" wins. The pros and cons of athe reform]. Money.it (in Italian). 5 December 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
    6. Giampiero Buonomo, Marco Cosentino (1999). "Il Vicario del Presidente nelle Assemblee parlamentari con particolare riferimento al Senato della Repubblica italiana" [The Vicar of the President in the Parliamentary Assemblies with particular reference to the Senate of the Italian Republic]. Academia.edu (in Italian). pp. 24–37. Retrieved 15 June 2020.

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