Rome votes in mayoral polls dominated by rubbish and boars

An elderly resident walks past uncollected trash below a building of the southern Portuense district of Rome on September 28, 2021, five days ahead of the Eternal City’s municipal elections. – Many Rome residents gripe about piling rubbish, unreliable public transport and street holes, and latest polls predict a second ballot between the centre-left candidate Roberto Gualtieri and the centre-right candidate Enrico Michetti. (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP)

by Sonia Logre and Gildas Le Roux
Agence France-Presse

ROME, Italy (AFP) – The people of Rome voted on Sunday to elect a new mayor who will have the daunting task of tackling poor public transport and disastrous rubbish management in the Italian capital, dubbed one of the dirtiest cities in the world.

Across the country from the Eternal City to Milan, Naples and Bologna, voting kicked off late on Monday for municipal elections being closely watched as a bellwether ahead of 2023 general elections.

But in Rome — one of the world’s filthiest cities, according to a ranking last month by the British magazine Time Out — residents are more concerned with the perennial transport, flooding, waste and pothole woes.

This picture shows uncollected trash on a street of the southern Portuense district of Rome on September 27, 2021, six days ahead of the Eternal City’s municipal elections. – Many Rome residents gripe about piling rubbish, unreliable public transport and street holes, and latest polls predict a second ballot between the centre-left candidate Roberto Gualtieri and the centre-right candidate Enrico Michetti. (Photo by ANDREAS SOLARO / AFP)

Rubbish management is so bad that wild boars are regularly seen wandering in residential areas, attracted by the pile-up of waste.

In the picturesque neighbourhood of Trastevere, where bins often overflow onto the cobblestones, 60-year-old resident Tiziana De Silvestro, out walking her dog, said the root of the problem was rubbish left overnight outside bars and restaurants.

“Now the city is full of animals, crows, seagulls, not to mention mice and cockroaches,” she said.

‘Tomorrow cholera’

Incumbent Rome mayor, Virginia Raggi of the Five Star movement waves on stage during a campaign rally ahead of the municipal elections in Rome on October 1, 2021. – The boars boldly root through Rome’s rotting rubbish, as furious residents cry foul: there are political fortunes at stake in mayoral elections in Italy’s biggest cities this weekend, but in the Eternal City garbage is the biggest talking point. (Photo by ANDREAS SOLARO / AFP)

Rome’s current mayor, Virginia Raggi from the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S), has won praise for taking on the city’s fierce new mafia, the Casamonica family of loan sharks and drug traffickers.

But her widely mocked plans to use sheep as lawnmowers and bees to combat pollution — while rotting refuse piles up next to playgrounds, buses spontaneously combust in the heat and weeds run wild — may cost her dearly.

The candidate of the right-wing alliance, Nicola Michetti, is likely to pocket the most votes thanks to a split on the left, according to the last polls published before a pre-election blackout.

But he is not predicted to garner more than the 50 percent of votes needed to avoid a run-off in two weeks — and polls say he may then lose in round two to the Democratic Party’s Roberto Gualtieri, a former economy minister.

Michetti, a 55-year-old lawyer, warns: “Today we have seagulls and boars, tomorrow it could be cholera.”

His champion is the head of far-right Brothers of Italy party Giorgia Meloni, who said Rome has become an international joke.

Gualtieri and rival centre-left candidate Carlo Calenda, meanwhile, have called for round tables with experts to tackle the problem of the wild boars.

A woman casts her ballot at a polling station for the municipal elections in Rome on October 3, 2021. – Across the country, in Milan, Rome, Naples and Bologna, voters were heading to the urns for the municipal elections being closely watched as a test ahead of a general election in 2023. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)

Some 12 million voters are eligible to cast ballots in the elections, which are being held not only in the country’s largest cities but in more than 1,000 smaller centres, including Morterone in Lombardy, which has just 33 inhabitants.

People wait outside a polling station to vote for the municipal elections in Rome on October 3, 2021. – Across the country, in Milan, Rome, Naples and Bologna, voters were heading to the urns for the municipal elections being closely watched as a test ahead of a general election in 2023. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)

Turnout as of 7 pm (1700 GMT) was a little more than 33 percent nationally and nearly 30 percent in Rome.

Traditionally left-wing Bologna is considered a safe seat, while the centre left is also confident of taking Milan and Naples. The race is closer in Turin, which the centre right is eyeing hungrily.

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