Nicoletta Fabio

Italian politician
Nicoletta Fabio
Mayor of Siena
Incumbent
Assumed office
19 June 2023
Preceded byLuigi De Mossi
Personal details
Born (1961-03-13) 13 March 1961 (age 63)
Siena, Italy
Political partyCentre-right independent
Alma materUniversity of Florence
ProfessionTeacher, journalist

Nicoletta Fabio (born 13 March 1961) is an Italian politician.

A centre-right independent, she serves as Mayor of Siena since 2023, the first woman to hold the office.

Biography

From 1986 to 1988, Fabio was editor-in-chief of the Imago Moda magazine, published by the Edifir publishing house in Florence, for which she also edited some volumes in collaboration with the Centro Moda. After enrolling in the national register of publicist journalists in 1988, she was part of the editorial staff of Gift magazine, the company newspaper of the Florence Gift Mart in Florence, from 1989 to 2003, then continuing her journalistic activity until 2015.[1]

From 1987 to 1992 she was a tenured teacher in lower secondary school and then moved on to a tenured teacher for Literature and Latin in high schools until her mayoral run in 2023.

Mayor of Siena

On 6 March 2023 the parties of the centre-right coalition officially presented Nicoletta Fabio as their candidate in view of the local elections.[2]

In the first electoral round of May 14, 2023, she obtained 30.5% of the votes, against the candidate of the centre-left coalition Anna Ferretti, who instead obtained 28.8%, with which she goes to the ballot. Fabio won the second electoral round of 28-29 May, gaining 52.2%% of the preferences with 1,037 votes behind her challenger, becoming the first woman Mayor of Siena.

References

  1. ^ "Nicoletta Fabio nuova Sindaca di Siena". radiosienatv.it. 29 May 2023. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  2. ^ "Elezioni, ufficiale: il centrodestra sceglie Nicoletta Fabio come candidato sindaco". gazzettadisiena.it. 6 March 2023. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
Political offices
Preceded by
Luigi De Mossi
Mayor of Siena
since 2023
Incumbent
  • v
  • t
  • e
Italy Mayors of provincial capitals of Italy
Agrigento
Francesco Miccichè (centre-right)
Alessandria
Giorgio Abonante (PD)
Ancona
Daniele Silvetti (FI)
Andria
Giovanna Bruno (PD)
Arezzo
Alessandro Ghinelli (centre-right)
Ascoli Piceno
Marco Fioravanti (FdI)
Asti
Maurizio Rasero (FI)
Avellino
Gianluca Festa (I)
Barletta
Cosimo Cannito (centre-right)
Belluno
Oscar De Pellegrin (centre-right)
Benevento
Clemente Mastella (NC)
Bergamo
Elena Carnevali (PD)
Biella
Marzio Olivero (FdI)
Bolzano
Renzo Caramaschi (PD)
Brescia
Laura Castelletti (centre-left)
Brindisi
Giuseppe Marchionna (centre-right)
Caltanissetta
Roberto Gambino (M5S)
Campobasso
Roberto Gravina (M5S)
Carbonia
Pietro Morittu (PD)
Caserta
Carlo Marino (PD)
Catanzaro
Nicola Fiorita (centre-left)
Chieti
Diego Ferrara (PD)
Como
Alessandro Rapinese (I)
Cosenza
Franz Caruso (PSI)
Cremona
Gianluca Galimberti (PD)
Crotone
Vincenzo Voce (I)
Cuneo
Patrizia Manassero (PD)
Enna
Maurizio Dipietro (IV)
Fermo
Paolo Calcinaro (I)
Ferrara
Alan Fabbri (LN)
Foggia
Maria Aida Episcopo (centre-left)
Forlì
Gian Luca Zattini (LN)
Frosinone
Riccardo Mastrangeli (FI)
Gorizia
Rodolfo Ziberna (FI)
Grosseto
Antonfrancesco Vivarelli Colonna (centre-right)
Imperia
Claudio Scajola (centre-right)
Isernia
Piero Castrataro (centre-left)
La Spezia
Pierluigi Peracchini (CI)
L'Aquila
Pierluigi Biondi (FdI)
Latina
Matilde Celentano (FdI)
Lecce
Carlo Salvemini (centre-left)
Lecco
Mauro Gattinoni (centre-left)
Livorno
Luca Salvetti (centre-left)
Lodi
Andrea Furegato (PD)
Lucca
Mario Pardini (centre-right)
Macerata
Sandro Parcaroli (LN)
Mantua
Mattia Palazzi (PD)
Massa
Francesco Persiani (LN)
Matera
Domenico Bennardi (M5S)
Modena
Massimo Mezzetti (PD)
Monza
Paolo Pilotto (PD)
Novara
Alessandro Canelli (LN)
Nuoro
Andrea Soddu (I)
Oristano
Massimiliano Sanna (RS)
Padua
Sergio Giordani (centre-left)
Parma
Michele Guerra (IC)
Pavia
Michele Lissia (PD)
Perugia
Andrea Romizi (FI)
Pesaro
Andrea Biancani (PD)
Pescara
Carlo Masci (FI)
Piacenza
Katia Tarasconi (PD)
Pisa
Michele Conti (LN)
Pistoia
Alessandro Tomasi (FdI)
Pordenone
Alessandro Ciriani (centre-right)
Potenza
Mario Guarente (LN)
Prato
Ilaria Bugetti (PD)
Ragusa
Giuseppe Cassì (I)
Ravenna
Michele De Pascale (PD)
Reggio Emilia
Marco Massari (PD)
Rieti
Daniele Sinibaldi (FdI)
Rimini
Jamil Sadegholvaad (PD)
Rovigo
Edoardo Gaffeo (centre-left)
Salerno
Vincenzo Napoli (PD)
Sassari
Giuseppe Mascia (PD)
Savona
Marco Russo (PD)
Siena
Nicoletta Fabio (centre-right)
Sondrio
Marco Scaramellini (LN)
Syracuse
Francesco Italia (Az)
Taranto
Rinaldo Melucci (I)
Teramo
Gianguido D'Alberto (centre-left)
Terni
Stefano Bandecchi (AP)
Trani
Amedeo Bottaro (PD)
Trapani
Giacomo Tranchida (PD)
Trento
Franco Ianeselli (centre-left)
Treviso
Mario Conte (LN)
Trieste
Roberto Dipiazza (FI)
Udine
Alberto Felice De Toni (centre-left)
Varese
Davide Galimberti (PD)
Verbania
Silvia Marchionini (PD)
Vercelli
Andrea Corsaro (FI)
Verona
Damiano Tommasi (centre-left)
Vibo Valentia
Maria Limardo (centre-right)
Vicenza
Giacomo Possamai (PD)
Viterbo
Chiara Frontini (I)