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POLITICS

Why are there so few women in Italy’s most powerful jobs?

When the Italian government sat down with heads of industry to discuss the budget this week, there was something noticeably missing from the picture: women.

Why are there so few women in Italy’s most powerful jobs?
Italy ranks poorly for gender equality and things are getting worse. Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP.

Photos of the high-powered meetings published by Repubblica show a sea of ties, with rows of male politicians and male business leaders on either side of the table.

The difficult task of spotting the females among them is like playing a depressing version of Where’s Wally. At first glance there seem to be none.

At the first meeting, called by Labour Minister Luigi Di Maio, there were no women present on the government’s side and only two women among the 36 heads of industry.

At a second meeting called by Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, the picture was almost the same except – spot the difference – there was only one woman in the room this time.

The pictures sum up the sad state of gender equality in Italian politics, business, and society.

Just 17 percent of the current government is female. There are five female ministers in the cabinet of 18, and only 14 percent of Italian mayors are women. 

The number of female prime ministers or presidents in Italy past or present, meanwhile, is a big fat zero.

The current Italian government cabinet. Only 17% of Italy's top government posts are taken by women. Photo: Andreas Solar/AFP

And these pitiful figures are not an improvement.

The previous government was 31 percent female, meaning that this administration has taken a big step backwards.

And a study last year showed a decline in the number of women taking top roles in Italian government, as well as a drop in wage equality, with figures from before this government took office.

In business, it took the passing of a law to improve things. Since 2012, listed companies have been required to have at least 33 percent female board members. Today the percentage of female board members at Italy's top companies is 34 percent, says Istat.

But few of them, it seems, are in real positions of power. Only seven out of 100 Italian companies have a female head – although that is a threefold increase since 2013, when female Italian company directors were almost unheard of.

So why are things still this bad in 2018?

Many Italian women say that pursuing a demanding, high-powered career is just not a realistic option.

With little support available, many face a choice between career and family

Donatella Prampolini, vice president of Confcommercio and one of the two women present as Di Maio's meeting, told Repubblica that too often women give up their careers before reaching the top.

READ ALSO: Italy's gender gap is getting a whole lot worse

“We're still surprised to see women at the top,” she says, “We still need exceptional personal situations to get there; for example I could count on my husband and parents to raise my three children. Without them, I would not have been at that table.”

“It’s an unacceptable situation,” she says, and blames “the lack of services, the lack of welfare, and the dominant culture” in Italy.

Successive governments have failed to prioritise these issues, and the current government doesn't seem to be changing that trend.

Instead, a bill proposed by conservative senator Simone Pillon, of the right-wing League, risks turning the clock back 50 years for women, children and survivors of domestic abuse, as it aims to change the rules on the separation of couples and the custody of children.

People in Rome protest the so-called Pillon bill on divorce and custody rights. Photo: Alberto Pizzoli/AFP

Meanwhile, policy providing affordable childcare and shared parental leave has been sidelined, meaning many young Italian women are either putting careers on hold to have children, or putting off starting a family because they just can’t afford it.

And pressure from society plays no small part in the decisions women make.

Sophia is a 31-year-old business graduate living in Siena who just had her first child. “Everyone in my family just expected me to give up my job when I found out I was pregnant,” she tells me.

“And it was clear that my husband wasn’t going to give up his. No one expected him to stop working. Besides, he makes more money and has a higher position in his company,” she explains.

As Italy’s birth rate plummets, the government has launched misguided policies such as that of offering people a free piece of farmland for having a third child, though the root cause of the problem has not been tackled.

Sophia says she thought she’d “probably get made redundant anyway” once her boss found out she was pregnant.

Her claim is not really as shocking as it sounds; among those in work, one in four Italian women loses her job within a year of giving birth, according to Istat – and the risk increases with each child.

Unlike some other European countries, Italy doesn't have comprehensive child benefit schemes.

Only 40 percent of Italy's workforce is female, one of the lowest rates of any developed country in the world.

Women have more equality in Mexico, Kazakhstan, Zimbabwe or Bangladesh than in Italy, according to the World Economic Forum's 2017 report on the global gender gap.

Out of 144 countries, Italy ranks 82nd for equal opportunities at work and in politics, education and health.

Italy lags far behind its Northern European neighbours, who lead the index globally.

In a society with such deep and widespread gender inequality, the lack of women – and lack of interest in issues holding them back – at the top of government comes as no surprise. It's a self-perpetuating system, and it needs to be interrupted

READ ALSO: 

POLITICS

Can foreign residents in Italy vote in the European elections?

The year 2024 is a bumper one for elections, among them the European elections in June. Italy is of course a member of the EU - so can foreign residents vote in the elections that will almost certainly affect their daily lives?

Can foreign residents in Italy vote in the European elections?

Across Europe, people will go to the polls in early June to select their representatives in the European Parliament, with 76 seats up for grabs in Italy. 

Although European elections usually see a much lower turnout than national elections, they are still seen as important by Italian politicians.

Giorgia Meloni will stand as a candidate this year, hoping use her personal popularity to give her Brothers of Italy party a boost and build on her success in Italy to “send the left into opposition” at the European level too.

When to vote

Across Italy, polling takes place on Saturday 8th and Sunday 9th June 2024.

Polling stations will be set up in the same places as for national and local elections – usually town halls, leisure centres and other public buildings.

You have to vote at the polling station for the municipality in which you are registered as a resident, which should be indicated on your electoral card.

Polling stations open at 8am and mostly close at 6pm, although some stay open later.

Unlike in presidential or local elections, there is only a single round of voting in European elections.

Who can vote? 

Italian citizens – including dual nationals – can vote in European elections, even if they don’t live in Italy. As is common for Italian domestic elections, polling booths will be set up in Italian consulates around the world to allow Italians living overseas to vote.

Non-Italian citizens who are living in Italy can only vote if they have citizenship of an EU country. So for example Irish citizens living in Italy can vote in European elections but Americans, Canadians, Australians, etc. cannot.

Brits in Italy used to be able to vote before Brexit, but now cannot – even if they have the post-Brexit carta di soggiorno.

If you have previously voted in an election in Italy – either local or European – you should still be on the electoral roll.

If not, in order to vote you need to send an application more than 90 days before the election date.

How does the election work?

The system for European elections differs from most countries’ domestic polls. MEPs are elected once every five years.

Each country is given an allocation of MEPs roughly based on population size. At present there are 705 MEPs: Germany – the country in the bloc with the largest population – has the most while the smallest number belong to Malta with just six.

Italy, like most of its EU neighbours, elects its MEPs through direct proportional representation via the ‘list’ system, so that parties gain the number of MEPs equivalent to their share of the overall vote.

So, for example, if Meloni’s party won 50 percent of the vote they would get 38 out of the total of 76 Italian seats.

Exactly who gets to be an MEP is decided in advance by the parties who publish their candidate lists in priority order. So let’s say that Meloni’s party does get that 50 percent of the vote – then the people named from 1 to 38 on their list get to be MEPs, and the people lower down on the list do not, unless a candidate (for example, Meloni) declines the seat and passes it on to the next person on the list.

In the run up to the election, the parties decide on who will be their lead candidates and these people will almost certainly be elected (though Meloni would almost definitely not take up her seat as an MEP, as this would mean resigning from office in Italy).

The further down the list a name appears, the less likely that person is to be heading to parliament.

Once in parliament, parties usually seek to maximise their influence by joining one of the ‘blocks’ made up of parties from neighbouring countries that broadly share their interests and values eg centre-left, far-right, green.

The parliament alternates between Strasbourg and Brussels. 

Find out more about voting in the European elections from Italy on the European Parliament’s website or the Italian interior ministry’s website.

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