List of prime ministers of Italy
- Top left: Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour was the first prime minister of the Kingdom of Italy.
- Top right: Benito Mussolini was the longest-serving prime minister in Italian history.
- Bottom left: Silvio Berlusconi was the longest-serving prime minister of the Italian Republic.
- Bottom right: Giorgia Meloni is the current prime minister of Italy as well as the first woman to hold the office.
The prime minister of Italy is the head of the Council of Ministers, which holds effective executive power in the Italian government. The first officeholder was Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour, who was sworn in on 23 March 1861 after the unification of Italy. Cavour previously served as Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Sardinia, an office from which the Italian prime minister took most of its powers and duties. During the monarchy period, prime ministers were appointed by the king of Italy, as laid down in the Albertine Statute. From 1925 until the fall of his regime in 1943, fascist dictator Benito Mussolini formally modified the office title to "Head of Government, Prime Minister and Secretary of State". From 1861 to 1946, 30 men served as prime ministers, leading 67 governments in total.
After the abolition of the Kingdom of Italy in 1946 and the proclamation of the Italian Republic, the office was established by Articles 92 through 96 of the Constitution of Italy. Alcide De Gasperi is the only prime minister who has held this position both in the Kingdom of Italy and in the Republic of Italy.
The prime minister is appointed by the President of the Republic and must receive a confidence vote by both houses of Parliament: the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. From 1946 to 2022, in the first 76 years after the creation of the Republic, 30 men served as prime ministers. The current officeholder is Giorgia Meloni, who was appointed on 22 October 2022, becoming the first woman to hold this office.
The longest-serving prime minister in the history of Italy was Benito Mussolini, who ruled the country from 1922 until 1943; the longest-serving prime minister of the Italian Republic was Silvio Berlusconi, who held the position for more than nine years between 1994 and 2011. The shortest-serving officeholder was Tommaso Tittoni, who served as prime minister for only 16 days in 1905, while the shortest-serving prime minister of the Italian Republic was Fernando Tambroni, who governed for 123 days in 1960.
Prime ministers of Italy
Prime ministers of the Kingdom of Italy (1861–1946)
Parties:
- 1861–1912:
- Historical Right
- Historical Left
- Military
- 1912–1922:
- Liberals / Italian Liberal Party
- Italian Radical Party
- Italian Reformist Socialist Party
- 1922–1943:
- National Fascist Party
Coalitions:
- 1861–1912:
- Rightist coalition
- Leftist coalition
- Mixed coalition
- 1912–1922:
- Liberal coalition
- 1922–1943:
- Fascist government
- 1943–1946:
- National Liberation Committee
- Mixed coalition
- Right: Historical Right
- Left: Historical Left
- PSI/PSIUP: Italian Socialist Party
- PR: Italian Radical Party
- PL: Liberals
- PRI: Italian Republican Party
- UECI: Italian Catholic Electoral Union
- PSRI: Italian Reformist Socialist Party
- PLDI: Italian Democratic Liberal Party
- PPI: Italian People's Party
- DS: Social Democracy
- PLI: Italian Liberal Party
- PA: Agrarian Party
- PNF: National Fascist Party
- ANI: Italian Nationalist Association
- DC: Christian Democracy
- PCI: Italian Communist Party
- PdA: Action Party
- PDL: Labour Democratic Party
Symbols:
† Died in office
Prime ministers of the Italian Republic (1946–present)
Parties:
Coalitions:
- 1946–1994:
- National Liberation Committee
- Centrist coalition
- Organic centre-left
- Pentapartito / Quadripartito
- Mixed coalition
- 1994–present:
- Centre-right coalition
- Centre-left coalition
- Mixed coalition
- DC: Christian Democracy
- PSI/PSIUP: Italian Socialist Party
- PCI: Italian Communist Party
- PRI: Italian Republican Party
- PDL: Labour Democratic Party
- PSDI: Italian Democratic Socialist Party
- PLI: Italian Liberal Party
- PDS: Democratic Party of the Left
- FdV: Federation of the Greens
- FI: Forza Italia
- LN: Northern League
- AN: National Alliance
- CCD: Christian Democratic Centre
- UdC: Union of the Centre (1993)
- PPI: Italian People's Party
- RI: Italian Renewal
- UD: Democratic Union
- PRC: Communist Refoundation Party
- DS: Democrats of the Left
- SDI: Italian Democratic Socialists
- PdCI: Party of Italian Communists
- UDR: Democratic Union for the Republic
- Dem: The Democrats
- UDEUR: Union of Democrats for Europe
- UDC: Union of the Centre (2002)
- NPSI: New Italian Socialist Party
- DL: The Daisy
- RnP: Rose in the Fist
- IdV: Italy of Values
- PdL: The People of Freedom
- PD: Democratic Party
- FLI: Future and Freedom
- NCD: New Centre-Right
- SC: Civic Choice
- PpI: Populars for Italy
- RI: Italian Radicals
- AP: Popular Alternative
- CpE: Centrists for Europe
- M5S: Five Star Movement
- Lega: League
- Art.1: Article One
- IV: Italia Viva
- IpF: Together for the Future
- A: Action
- FdI: Brothers of Italy
Timeline
Kingdom of Italy (1861–1946)

Italian Republic (1946–present)

See also
- Deputy Prime Minister of Italy
- Lists of office-holders
- Politics of Italy
- Prime Minister of Italy
- List of prime ministers of Italy by time in office
References
Bibliography
- Guglielmotti, Umberto, ed. (1966). I presidenti del Consiglio dei Ministri dell'Unita' d'Italia ad oggi, Volume 3 (in Italian). CEN.
- Viviani, Maria Paola, ed. (1970). La presidenza del Consiglio dei ministri in alcuni stati dell'Europa occidentale ed in Italia (in Italian). Giuffrè.
- Rotelli, Ettore, ed. (1972). La Presidenza Del Consiglio Dei Ministri: Il Problema Del Coordinamento Dell'amministrazione Centrale in Italia, (1848–1948) (in Italian). Giuffrè.
- Marzo, Corradino; Amodio, Vito Domenico, eds. (2014). I governi della Repubblica. Storia dei Presidenti del Consiglio, Volume 1 (in Italian). Lupo. ISBN 978-8866671893.