1994 Italian local elections
The 1994 Italian local elections were held on 12 and 26 June, on 20 November and 4 December.[1] It was the first time for many municipalities where citizens could vote both for the mayor and the city council.
![]() |
|---|
|
The elections were won by the Democratic Party of the Left, led by Achille Occhetto and his centre-left to left-wing alliance. But the elections were also characterized by a strong aftermath of Forza Italia, the new centre-right party founded by media magnate Silvio Berlusconi
Municipal elections
Mayoral election results
| Cities | Incumbent mayor | Party | Elected mayor | Party | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asti | Giorgio Galvagno | PSI | Alberto Bianchino | PDS | ||
| Como | Renzo Pigni | PSI | Alberto Botta | FI | ||
| Rovigo | Luigi Frezzato | PDS | Fabio Baratella | PDS | ||
| Verona | Enzo Erminero | DC | Michela Sironi Mariotti | FI | ||
| Savona | Sergio Tortarolo | PDS | Francesco Gervasio | FI | ||
| Parma | Mara Colla | PSI | Stefano Lavagetto | PDS | ||
| Piacenza | Filippo Grandi | PLI | Giacomo Vaciago | PDS | ||
| Lucca | Arturo Pacini | DC | Giulio Lazzerini | PPI | ||
| Pistoia | Lido Scarpetti | PDS | Lido Scarpetti | PDS | ||
| Rieti | Paolo Bigliocchi | PSI | Antonio Cicchetti | AN | ||
| L'Aquila | Vincenzo Grimaldi | Ind. | Carmine Centi | PDS | ||
| Matera | Francesco Saverio Acito | DC | Mario Manfredi | PDS | ||
| Catanzaro | Antonio Bevacqua | PRI | Benito Gualtieri | PPI | ||
| Vibo Valentia | Bruno Panuccio | DC | Giuseppe Iannello | PDS | ||
| Cagliari | Gaetano Giua Marassi | DC | Mariano Delogu | AN | ||
| Oristano | Pietro Arca | DC | Mariano Scarpa | PDS | ||
| Gorizia | Erminio Tuzzi | DC | Gaetano Valenti | FI | ||
| Enna | Vincenzo Vigiano | DC | Antonio Alvano | FI | ||
| Messina | Salvatore Francesco Leonardi | DC | Francesco Providenti | PPI | ||
| Ragusa | Giorgio Massari | DC | Giorgio Chessari | PDS | ||
| Syracuse | Vincenzo Di Raimondo | DC | Marco Fatuzzo | PPI | ||
| Trapani | Mario Buscaino | PDS | Mario Buscaino | PDS | ||
| Brescia | Paolo Corsini | PDS | Mino Martinazzoli | PPI | ||
| Sondrio | Flaminio Benetti | DC | Alcide Molteni | PDS | ||
| Treviso | Gianfranco Gagliardi | DC | Giancarlo Gentilini | LN | ||
| Massa | Luigi Della Pina | DC | Roberto Pucci | PDS | ||
| Pisa | Sergio Cortopassi | PSI | Piero Floriani | PDS | ||
| Pescara | Mario Collevecchio* | PDS | Carlo Pace | AN | ||
| Brindisi | Francesco Paolo Arina | DC | Michele Errico | PDS | ||
(*)Mayor directly elected who had been fired.
Provincial elections
| Provinces | Incumbent president | Party | Elected president | Party | Coalition | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Catania | Antonio Pennisi[2] | None | Nello Musumeci | AN | None | |||
| Lucca | Pier Giorgio Licheri | DC | Enrico Grabau | AN | Centre-right | |||
| Ancona | Mariano Guzzini | PDS | Marisa Galeazzi | PDS | Left-wing | |||
| Reggio Calabria | Mario Galletta | DC | Umberto Pirilli | FI | Centre-right | |||
| Agrigento | Marika Nicosia Caruselli | DC | Stefano Vivacqua | PSI | Centre-left | |||
| Caltanissetta | Ernesto Gioacchino Fasulo | DC | Vincenzo Rampulla | IND | Centre-right | |||
| Enna | Michele Galvagno | DC | Michele Galvagno | PPI | None | |||
| Messina | Amelia Ioli | DC | Giuseppe Buzzanca | AN | Centre-right | |||
| Palermo | Francesco Caldaronello | DC | Francesco Musotto | FI | Centre-right | |||
| Ragusa | Giuseppe Lonatica | PDS | Giovanni Mauro | FI | Centre-right | |||
| Siracusa | Salvatore Baio | PDS | Mario Cavallaro | AN | Centre-right | |||
| Trapani | Vincenzo Russo | PDS | Carmelo Spitaleri | FdV | Centre-left | |||
| Massa-Carrara | Amedeo Boiardi | PSI | Franco Gussoni | PPI | Centre-left | |||
| Foggia | Teodoro Moretti | PSI | Antonio Pellegrino | IND | Centre-left | |||
References
- Storia amministrativa. La cronologia, 1945–1980
- Prefectural commissioner
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
