Sicilian Regional Assembly
Sicilian Regional Assembly Assemblea Regionale Siciliana | |
---|---|
18th Legislature | |
Type | |
Type | |
History | |
Founded | 25 May 1947 |
Leadership | |
President | Gaetano Galvagno, FdI since 11 November 2022 |
Structure | |
Seats | 70 |
Political groups | Government (40)
Opposition (29) |
Elections | |
Last election | 25 September 2022 |
Meeting place | |
Sala d'Ercole, Palazzo dei Normanni, Palermo | |
Website | |
ars.sicilia.it |
The Sicilian Regional Assembly is the legislative body of Sicily. While it has a long history as an autonomous entity, the modern Region of Sicily was established by Royal Decree on 15 May 1946, before the Italian Republic. The Regional Assembly has the widest legislative power in Italy and is the only regional assembly to have the title of "parliament" whose members are called "deputies" as are those in Rome. Seventy deputies are elected every five years in the nine provinces.[1]
History
The Sicilian Parliament is arguably considered the oldest parliament in the world[2][3] (together with that Icelandic[4] and Faroese,[5] which, however, had no decision-making powers[citation needed], a fact that makes the Sicilian Parliament the first in the modern sense). In 1097 came the first conference in Mazara del Vallo was convened by Roger I the Great Count of an initially itinerant parliament. Since 1130 the House seat has been the Palazzo dei Normanni in Palermo.
Post-war
The election of a democratic parliament came at the end of World War II. To defuse the separatist movement in Sicily, the Sicilian Regional Council was established in February 1945 and the special statute was issued on May 15, 1946.
After the regional elections of April 20, 1947, this body was reborn as the Sicilian Regional Assembly on May 25, 1947. In 1997 the Assembly celebrated its 900th anniversary, and in 2001 the President was elected directly by the citizens. On 26 January 2008, for the first time in republican history, the Assembly was dissolved by the resignation of Regional President Salvatore Cuffaro.
Seat
The Assembly has its seat in the prestigious Palazzo dei Normanni (Norman Palace) in Palermo. It was constructed in the 11th century following the Norman conquest of Sicily and has seen several expansion and renovation operations. It hosted the kings of Sicily, including Frederick II of Swabia, and later the viceroy of Spain. Adjacent is the Palatine Chapel. The tourist services in the Palace and the Palatine Chapel are entrusted to the Foundation Frederick II.[citation needed]
Composition
The Assembly is composed of seventy deputies elected by direct universal suffrage every five years by voters in Sicily. Until 2017, the members were 90. From 25 May 1947 to now there were XVII legislatures, initially for a period of four years, while in 1971 five years. For the first time the XIV^ legislature ended prematurely in 2008 due to the resignation of the President of the region, Salvatore Cuffaro. The actual electoral mechanism, which includes a barrier of 5% of the list, provides for the provincial colleges of 62 members plus the president-elect and a candidate for president with the most votes among the non-elect. The remaining six seats are allocated to the majority share to reach 42 members.
Electoral system
From 1947 until 1996, the Sicilian Regional Assembly had 90 regional deputies elected with the proportional system on the basis of the nine provincial constituencies, while the president of the region and the assessors were elected by the deputies. In the 2001 election, the Sicilian regional presidency became a directly elected office, and the Tatarella Law was applied temporarily to elect 72 deputies from the provincial constituencies, while 18 came from the list of the elected president and one for the second classified among the president candidates, with the threshold at 4 percent.
A new electoral law was adopted in 2005. This law created a mixed electoral system with the following parameters:
- 80 out of 90 deputies are chosen through a proportional system in the provincial constituencies, with an electoral barrier of 5% on a regional basis for each party;
- proportional seats are distributed only at the provincial level;
- the distribution at the provincial level (proportional to the population and therefore variable each term) was: 7 seats for the province of Agrigento, 4 for Caltanissetta, 17 for Catania, 3 for Enna, 11 for Messina, 20 for Palermo, 5 for Ragusa, 6 for Syracuse, 7 for Trapani;
- up to 9 deputies (including the President) are elected with the regional list of the presidential candidate to reach the threshold of 54 majority seats;
- 1 seat is reserved for the second-place finisher in the presidential election.
With the modification of the law in 2013, the number of deputies dropped to 70 beginning with the regional election of 2017. The selection process in this current system has the following parameters:
- 62 out of 70 deputies are chosen through a proportional system in provincial constituencies, with an electoral barrier of 5% on a regional basis for each party;
- proportional seats are distributed only at the provincial level;
- the distribution at the provincial level (proportional to the population and therefore variable every term) is: 6 seats for the province of Agrigento, 3 for Caltanissetta, 13 for Catania, 2 for Enna, 8 for Messina, 16 for Palermo, 4 for Ragusa, 5 for Syracuse, 5 for Trapani;
- 7 deputies (including the President) are elected with the regional list of the presidential candidate.
- 1 seat is reserved for the second-place finisher in the presidential election.
Political groups
The Sicilian Regional Assembly is currently composed of the following political groups:[6]
Party | Seats | Status | |
---|---|---|---|
Brothers of Italy | 13 / 70
|
In government | |
Forza Italia | 12 / 70
|
In government | |
Democratic Party | 11 / 70
|
In opposition | |
Five Star Movement | 11 / 70
|
In opposition | |
South calls North | 7 / 70
|
In opposition | |
Italy First – League | 6 / 70
|
In government | |
Christian Democracy | 5 / 70
|
In government | |
Populars and Autonomists | 4 / 70
|
In government | |
Mixed Group | 1 / 70
|
External support |
Elections
20 April 1947 | Legislative |
3 June 1951 | |
5 June 1955 | |
7 June 1959 | |
9 June 1963 | |
11 June 1967 | |
13 June 1971 | |
20 June 1976 | |
21 June 1981 | |
22 June 1986 | |
16 June 1991 | |
16 June 1996 | |
24 June 2001 | Presidential & Legislative |
28 May 2006 | |
13 April 2008 | |
28 October 2012 | |
5 November 2017 | |
25 September 2022 |
Presidents (1947–present)
No. | Name | Legislature | Term of office | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ettore Cipolla | I | 1947 | 1951 | UQ | |
2 | Giulio Bonfiglio | II | 1951 | 1955 | DC | |
3 | Giuseppe La Loggia | III | 1955 | 1956 | DC | |
4 | Giuseppe Alessi | 1956 | 1959 | DC | ||
5 | Ferdinando Stagno D'Alcontres | IV | 1959 | 1963 | DC | |
6 | Rosario Lanza | V | 1963 | 1967 | DC | |
VI | 1967 | 1971 | ||||
7 | Angelo Bonfiglio | VII | 1971 | 1974 | DC | |
8 | Mario Fasino | 1974 | 1976 | DC | ||
9 | Pancrazio De Pasquale | VIII | 1976 | 1979 | PCI | |
10 | Michelangelo Russo | 1979 | 1981 | PCI | ||
11 | Salvatore Lauricella | IX | 1981 | 1986 | PSI | |
X | 1986 | 1991 | ||||
12 | Paolo Piccione | XI | 1991 | 1993 | PSI | |
13 | Angelo Capitummino | 1993 | 1996 | DC | ||
14 | Nicola Cristaldi | XII | 1996 | 2001 | AN | |
15 | Guido Lo Porto | XIII | 2001 | 2006 | AN | |
16 | Gianfranco Micciché | XIV | 2006 | 2008 | FI | |
17 | Francesco Cascio | XV | 2008 | 2012 | PdL | |
18 | Giovanni Ardizzone | XVI | 2012 | 2017 | UDC | |
(16) | Gianfranco Micciché | XVII | 2017 | 2022 | FI | |
19 | Gaetano Galvagno | XVIII | 2022 | FdI | ||
Source: Assemblea Regionale Siciliana – I Presidenti dell'Assemblea |
See also
References
- ^ Regleg. Sicily. EU political regions.
- ^ "Storia del Parlamento - Il Parlamento".
- ^ Enzo Gancitano, Mazara dopo i Musulmani fino alle Signorie - Dal Vescovado all'Inquisizione, Angelo Mazzotta Editore, 2001, p. 30.
- ^ "Hurstwic: Viking-age Laws and Legal Procedures".
- ^ "The Faroese Parliament" (PDF).
- ^ "Gruppi Parlamentari | ARS". www.ars.sicilia.it (in Italian). Retrieved 4 July 2019.
External links
Media related to Sicilian Regional Assembly at Wikimedia Commons