Monday 2 February 2026 14:02
Eighty Years After Women Won the Vote, Some in Italy Still Call It a Mistake
Eighty Years After Women Won the Vote, Italy Is Still Arguing About What It MeantItaly marked the 80th anniversary of women’s suffrage this year with official commemorations and public reflection on a turning point in the country’s democratic history. In 1946, Italian women voted for the first time in the institutional referendum that abolished the monarchy and elected a Constituent Assembly, formally entering the political life of the Republic after decades of exclusion.Yet the anniversary was not only a moment of celebration. It also exposed how contested the legacy of that moment remains, after remarks made by Costantino Righi Riva, a local councillor in the town of Formigine, reignited a national debate over women’s political participation, family structures and the meaning of democracy itself.Speaking during a municipal council session devoted to commemorating the 1946 vote, Righi Riva described the extension of suffrage to women as “an attack on the unity of the family”. According to his argument, lawmakers at the time allegedly feared that granting women political rights would undermine traditional family structures, a fear he claimed history has since confirmed. He went on to link women’s suffrage to subsequent social and legal reforms, including divorce, abortion and changes to family law, framing them as part of a broader erosion of the family unit.
The remarks provoked immediate backlash, well beyond local politics. Regional and national figures condemned the comments as incompatible with the values of the Italian Republic, while parties across the political spectrum distanced themselves from Righi Riva’s interpretation. For many critics, the issue was not merely the content of the statement but what it implied: that women’s political equality was a social mistake rather than a democratic achievement.
The controversy has thrown renewed attention on a long-standing tension in Italian public life. While women have formally enjoyed the right to vote for eight decades, the translation of that right into real political power has been slow and uneven. Italy remains a country where political institutions are still largely male-dominated, where women are under-represented in leadership roles, and where symbolic milestones have often outpaced structural change.
At the same time, Righi Riva’s comments highlight how women’s suffrage is still interpreted by some through a cultural rather than democratic lens. Framing the vote as a threat to the family suggests a vision of citizenship in which political participation is secondary to prescribed social roles. Historians and constitutional scholars have long argued the opposite: that extending suffrage in 1946 was a recognition of women’s role in the Resistance, in post-war reconstruction and in shaping the moral foundations of the new Republic.
The debate also raises broader questions about how anniversaries are used in public discourse. Commemorations are often presented as settled history, but moments like this reveal that they remain sites of political struggle. For some, 1946 represents the completion of universal suffrage; for others, it marks the beginning of a longer, unfinished process toward equality.
Eighty years on, Italian women are voters, lawmakers, ministers and heads of government. Yet the reaction to Righi Riva’s remarks suggests that the legitimacy of women’s full political participation is still, in some quarters, implicitly questioned. The gap between formal rights and cultural acceptance remains visible.
As Italy reflects on the anniversary of women’s suffrage, the episode serves as a reminder that democracy is not only a matter of laws and institutions, but of shared values. The right to vote was not an attack on social cohesion, as critics insist, but a fundamental expansion of citizenship. The real challenge today is not revisiting that right, but ensuring that it continues to translate into equal voice, equal power and equal recognition within Italy’s democratic life.
Ph: QN
#news #civil rights
read the news on Wanted in Rome - News in Italy - Rome's local English news
Italy marked the 80th anniversary of women’s suffrage this year with official commemorations and public reflection on a turning point in the country’s democratic history. In 1946, Italian women voted for the first time in the institutional referendum that abolished the monarchy and elected a Constituent Assembly, formally entering the political life of the Republic after decades of exclusion.Yet the anniversary was not only a moment of celebration. It also exposed how contested the legacy of that moment remains, after remarks made by Costantino Righi Riva, a local councillor in the town of Formigine, reignited a national debate over women’s political participation, family structures and the meaning of democracy itself.
Speaking during a municipal council session devoted to commemorating the 1946 vote, Righi Riva described the extension of suffrage to women as “an attack on the unity of the family”. According to his argument, lawmakers at the time allegedly feared that granting women political rights would undermine traditional family structures, a fear he claimed history has since confirmed. He went on to link women’s suffrage to subsequent social and legal reforms, including divorce, abortion and changes to family law, framing them as part of a broader erosion of the family unit.
The remarks provoked immediate backlash, well beyond local politics. Regional and national figures condemned the comments as incompatible with the values of the Italian Republic, while parties across the political spectrum distanced themselves from Righi Riva’s interpretation. For many critics, the issue was not merely the content of the statement but what it implied: that women’s political equality was a social mistake rather than a democratic achievement.
The controversy has thrown renewed attention on a long-standing tension in Italian public life. While women have formally enjoyed the right to vote for eight decades, the translation of that right into real political power has been slow and uneven. Italy remains a country where political institutions are still largely male-dominated, where women are under-represented in leadership roles, and where symbolic milestones have often outpaced structural change.
At the same time, Righi Riva’s comments highlight how women’s suffrage is still interpreted by some through a cultural rather than democratic lens. Framing the vote as a threat to the family suggests a vision of citizenship in which political participation is secondary to prescribed social roles. Historians and constitutional scholars have long argued the opposite: that extending suffrage in 1946 was a recognition of women’s role in the Resistance, in post-war reconstruction and in shaping the moral foundations of the new Republic.
The debate also raises broader questions about how anniversaries are used in public discourse. Commemorations are often presented as settled history, but moments like this reveal that they remain sites of political struggle. For some, 1946 represents the completion of universal suffrage; for others, it marks the beginning of a longer, unfinished process toward equality.
Eighty years on, Italian women are voters, lawmakers, ministers and heads of government. Yet the reaction to Righi Riva’s remarks suggests that the legitimacy of women’s full political participation is still, in some quarters, implicitly questioned. The gap between formal rights and cultural acceptance remains visible.
As Italy reflects on the anniversary of women’s suffrage, the episode serves as a reminder that democracy is not only a matter of laws and institutions, but of shared values. The right to vote was not an attack on social cohesion, as critics insist, but a fundamental expansion of citizenship. The real challenge today is not revisiting that right, but ensuring that it continues to translate into equal voice, equal power and equal recognition within Italy’s democratic life.
Ph: QN
