In 2014, the governing
Democratic Party (PD) of Prime Minister
Matteo Renzi won the election with 40.8% of the vote and 31 seats, followed by the
Five Star Movement (M5S) with 21.2% and 17 seats and
Forza Italia (FI) with 16.8% and 13 seats. As a result, the PD was the second largest national party in the European Parliament by number of seats after the German
CDU/CSU and the largest among the
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D). The PD's score was also the best result for an Italian party in a nationwide election since the
1958 Italian general election, when
Christian Democracy (DC) won 42.4% of the vote. After less than three years from the 2014 electoral landslide, Renzi was forced to resign after the defeat in the
2016 Italian constitutional referendum and his foreign affairs minister
Paolo Gentiloni was appointed new head of government in December 2016. The
2018 Italian general election was characterized by a strong showing of
populist parties. The
centre-right coalition, led by
Matteo Salvini's right-wing populist
League (Lega), emerged with a
plurality of seats in the Chamber of Deputies and in the Senate while the anti-establishment M5S led by
Luigi Di Maio became the party with the largest number of votes, and Renzi's centre-left coalition came only third, with the worst electoral result of its history. As no political group or party won an outright majority, it resulted in a
hung parliament. After three months of negotiation, a government was finally formed on 1 June by the M5S and the League, with the M5S-linked independent
Giuseppe Conte as
Prime Minister of Italy and Di Maio and Salvini
Deputy Prime Ministers of Italy. On the centre-right side, FI welcomed in its lists candidates of the
Union of the Centre (UdC) and several alike minor parties while
Brothers of Italy (FdI) formed a partnership with
Direction Italy (DI) and minor groups. In the
2019 PD leadership election held in March,
Nicola Zingaretti was elected
secretary of the PD. In April, Zingaretti presented a special logo for the election, including a large reference to "We Are Europeans", a manifesto launched by
Carlo Calenda, and the symbol of the
Party of European Socialists (PES). Additionally, the PD tried to forge an alliance with minor parties, including
Article One (Art.1). March and April registered more developments on the centre-left. Under the new leadership of
Benedetto Della Vedova,
More Europe (+E) formed a joint list with
Italia in Comune (IiC), the
Italian Socialist Party (PSI), the
Italian Republican Party (PRI), the Italian section of the
European Democratic Party (EDP), the
Liberal Democratic Alliance for Italy (ALI), and minor parties;
Italian Left (SI), the
Communist Refoundation Party (PRC), minor parties and individual splinters from the disbanded
Free and Equal (LeU) formed
The Left (LS), a joint list inspired by the
Party of the European Left (PEL); and the
Federation of the Greens (FdV),
Possible (Pos) and
Green Italia (GI) formed
Green Europe (EV) under the banner of the
European Green Party (EGP). == Electoral system ==