For much of the post-war era, Italy was not usually seen as a leading example of women’s political representation. Instead, attention tended to focus on countries such as Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Iceland, where women achieved higher levels of political participation and where gender-equality indicators consistently ranked among the strongest in Europe. Today, however, Italy offers a compelling case study for understanding how debates about women’s political leadership are changing across the continent.
This is not because Italy has achieved gender equality. Far from it. Eurostat data show that female employment rates in Italy remain below those of several northern European countries, while the European Institute for Gender Equality’s Gender Equality Index places Italy behind a number of its European neighbours. Rather than presenting a model of gender equality already achieved, Italy illustrates the complexities and contradictions that often accompany social and political change.
What makes Italy particularly interesting today is the prominence of women at the highest levels of politics, despite representing very different ideological traditions. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, opposition leader Elly Schlein and Genoa mayor Silvia Salis have emerged as influential political figures whose careers reflect contrasting visions of leadership, society and public policy. Together, they provide a useful lens through which to examine the relationship between gender, power and political ideology in contemporary Europe.
The most significant turning point came on 22 October 2022, when Giorgia Meloni became Italy’s first female prime minister. The historical importance of that achievement is undeniable. In a study published in Politics and Governance, political scientists Elisabetta De Giorgi, Alice Cavalieri and Francesca Feo describe Meloni’s rise as the culmination of a long political journey that took her from youth activism on the Italian right to the highest office in the country. Her election marked a watershed moment in Italian politics and shattered one of the most enduring barriers in the nation’s political history.
Yet Meloni’s rise also revived an important debate within political science. In her influential 1967 book The Concept of Representation, political theorist Hanna Pitkin distinguished between descriptive and substantive representation. Descriptive representation concerns who hold political office; substantive representation concerns the interests and policies those officeholders pursue. More than half a century later, that distinction remains central to discussions about women and political power.
Italy provides a particularly clear illustration of this debate. Meloni’s election demonstrated that women can attain the highest levels of political authority within ideological traditions that differ markedly from those commonly associated with progressive feminism. As De Giorgi, Cavalieri and Feo note, Meloni’s political discourse has frequently emphasised family, motherhood and national identity. Her premiership has therefore prompted renewed discussion about whether the election of women to senior office necessarily translates into a particular set of feminist political goals.
Across the political divide stands Elly Schlein, who became secretary of the Democratic Party in February 2023. As leader of Italy’s principal centre-left party, Schlein has championed issues associated with social justice, equality and progressive reform. Her leadership means that one of Italy’s most important political contests is being shaped by two women whose ideological outlooks differ substantially. This challenges the assumption that female political leadership inevitably leads to consensus on questions of gender, welfare or social policy.
Among Europe’s largest democracies, such a situation remains relatively uncommon. France has never elected a female president. Spain has never had a female prime minister. Germany, after sixteen years under Angela Merkel, has been led by male chancellors since 2021. Italy is therefore among the few major European democracies where the government and the principal opposition are both led by women. This alone makes the country an especially valuable case for understanding the changing nature of political representation.
The emergence of Silvia Salis has added another layer to this story. A former Olympic hammer thrower and sports administrator, Salis was elected mayor of Genoa in May 2025. According to Italy’s ANSA news agency, she secured 51.48 per cent of the vote, winning outright in the first round. The victory was politically significant because it was achieved through a broad centre-left coalition. ANSA reported that both Salis and Schlein viewed the result as evidence that opposition unity could provide an effective electoral strategy against parties aligned with the national government. Running as a progressive independent backed by a broad centre-left coalition, Salis eventually won the high-profile mayoral seat, flipping the port city after years of right-wing governance as a civic outsider.
It would be premature to speculate about Salis’s future role in national politics as of now. Nevertheless, her election adds another prominent woman to Italy’s political landscape. Alongside Meloni and Schlein, she illustrates how women are increasingly visible across different levels of public life, from municipal government to national leadership.
The growing prominence of women in Italian politics has also drawn attention to the way female politicians are portrayed in the media. Research by Emanuele Brugnoli, Rosaria Simone and Marco Delmastro found evidence that women politicians in Italy continue to face forms of media coverage that differ from those experienced by men. Their study identified a greater tendency for reporting to focus on personal characteristics and non-political attributes when discussing female politicians. Such findings suggest that greater representation does not automatically remove long-standing gendered patterns in political discourse.
This distinction is important. Political visibility and social equality are not the same thing. Women may occupy powerful offices while still facing forms of scrutiny shaped by entrenched cultural assumptions. Increased representation is a significant achievement, but it does not mean that all barriers have disappeared.
Broader socio-economic indicators reinforce this point. Eurostat data continue to show that female employment rates in Italy lag behind those in several northern European countries. Issues such as childcare provision, labour-market participation, work-life balance and economic opportunity remain important subjects of political debate. The election of women to senior office is a historic achievement, but it does not by itself resolve deeper structural inequalities.
In many ways, this is what makes Italy such an interesting case. The country combines unprecedented female political leadership with continuing disagreements about the meaning of equality, representation and social progress. Rather than offering a single model of women’s advancement, Italy presents competing visions embodied by leaders from different political traditions.
For observers of European politics, that makes Italy especially instructive. The country’s experience demonstrates that the rise of women in politics does not produce a uniform agenda. Female leaders, like male leaders, can advocate very different ideas about society, citizenship, welfare, family policy and political change. Italy therefore offers an illuminating window into the evolving relationship between gender and power in contemporary Europe.
The prominence of Giorgia Meloni, Elly Schlein and Silvia Salis reflects a broader transformation in which women are no longer exceptions in political competition but increasingly central participants in it. Viewed through the lenses of representation, party politics and democratic leadership, contemporary Italy provides one of Europe’s most revealing examples to the broader world of competitive politics where women’s political leadership is reshaping public debate in the twenty-first century.
The writer is a published author of fifteen books. For feedback, he can be mailed at naveedqazi@live.com
