City Council of Milan
The City Council of Milan is the top-tier administrative body of the municipality of Milan, Lombardy, Italy. It consists of the elected Mayor of Milan and an elected 48-member assembly. It represents a legislative body which can also control Mayor's policy guidelines and be able to enforce his resignation by a motion of no confidence.
The City Council is elected for a five-years term and 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 by a mechanism of majority bonus.
The City Council meets at Palazzo Marino, seated in Piazza della Scala.
Composition
The political system of the Comuni of Italy was changed in 1993, when a semi-presidential system for the mayoral election was introduced. Previously, the Council was elected under a pure proportional system and the Council had the power to elect and dismiss the Mayor of Milan; since 1993 the Mayor and the Council are jointly elected by citizens, with an electoral law that assures to the elected Mayor a political majority in the Council.Under this system, the election of the Mayor is prior over the election of the Council. Voters express a direct choice for the Mayor or an indirect choice voting for the party of the candidate's coalition and this gives a result whereby the winning candidate is able to claim majority support in the new Council. The candidate who is elected Mayor has always a majority of 62% of seats in the City Council, which will support him during his term. The seats for each party of the coalition which wins the majority is determined proportionally.
In this type of system, the Council is generally elected for a five-year term, but, if the Mayor suffers a vote of no confidence, resigns or dies, under the simul stabunt, simul cadent clause introduced in 1993, also the Council is dissolved and a snap election is called.
The City Committee, the executive body of the city, chosen and presided directly by the Mayor, is generally composed by members of the City Council, which lost their membership into the assembly.
Functions
The Council acts as the supreme legislative body of the city. It is convened and chaired by a speaker appointed by the Council itself.The Council can decide over programs and public works projects, institution and system of taxes, the general rules for the use of goods and services, forecasting and reporting financial statements. Resolution basic acts attributed by law to its competence are the municipal statute, the regulations, the general criteria on the structure of offices and services.
After the creation of the Metropolitan City of Milan in 2015, which with its Metropolitan Council has the power to coordinate the municipalities around Milan in providing basic services and environment protection as the old Province of Milan did, the 2016 municipal administrative reform delegated to the 9 administrative Boroughs Councils of Milan some advisory functions related to local services, such as schools, social services, waste collection, roads, parks, libraries and local commerce.
City Hall
The City Council is seated at Palazzo Marino, a 16th-century palace located in Piazza della Scala, in the centre of Milan, Italy. Palazzo Marino has been Milan's city hall since 9 September 1861. It borders on Piazza San Fedele, Piazza della Scala, Via Case Rotte and Via Tommaso Marino.The palace was built for, and is named after, the Genoan trader and banker Tommaso Marino. It became a property of the State in 1781.
The current Council meeting room was inaugurated on 30 June 1953. A ciceronian inscription from the previous meeting place of the Council – the notorious Sala Alessi on the second floor of the palace – is reported on the marble walls around the room:
Presidents
This is a list of the presidents of the City Council since the 1993 electoral reform:Political composition
Historical composition
Election | Majority | Opposition | Total | Council | Mayor |
Election | Total | Council | Mayor | ||
6 June 1993 | 36 LN | 6 PRC 5 PDS 5 DC 3 Segni Pact 1 The Network 1 Greens 2 Socialists 1 MSI | 60 | Marco Formentini | |
27 April 1997 | 25 FI 10 AN 1 CCD | 10 PDS 8 LN 4 PRC 1 PPI 1 Greens | 60 | Gabriele Albertini | |
13 May 2001 | 25 FI 7 AN 3 LN 1 CCD | 10 DS 6 DL 3 PRC 3 IdV 1 Greens 1 Others | 60 | Gabriele Albertini | |
28 May 2006 | 27 FI 6 AN 2 LN 1 UDC | 19 The Olive Tree 2 PRC 2 Greens 1 Others | 60 | Letizia Moratti | |
15 May 2011 | 20 PD 4 SEL 2 FdS 2 IdV 1 RI | 13 PdL 4 LN 1 UDC 1 M5S | 48 | Giuliano Pisapia |
Current composition
Summary of the 5 June 2016 Milan City Council election results! colspan="4" rowspan="1" style="text-align:left;" | Parties and coalitions
! colspan="1" | Votes
! colspan="1" | %
! colspan="1" | Seats