Rome’s Constitutional Revolution: Cabinet Approves Special Legislative Powers and Fiscal Autonomy for Rome Capitale
In a landmark decision, Italy’s Council of Ministers (CDM) approved a constitutional reform that will grant Rome Capitale both legislative authority and financial autonomy, redefining the role of the Capital within the Italian Republic.
A New Constitutional Status
Central to the reform is a revision of Article 114 of the Constitution, expressly naming “Roma Capitale” alongside Regions, Provinces, Metropolitan Cities, Municipalities, and the State as a foundational territorial entity. This reconceptualization elevates Rome to a unique legal status, differentiating it from other organizational levels.
The bill introduces tailored administrative and financial autonomy under Article 119, ensuring that Rome receives the resources necessary to carry out its expanded responsibilities.
Scope of Legislative Authority
Starting with the first elections of Rome’s local Assembly following the law’s enactment (projected in 2027), Rome will be empowered to enact its own statutes in areas including:
•Local public transport
•Local administrative police
•Urban planning and territory governance
•Local commerce and trade regulation
•Cultural heritage management and promotion
•Tourism development
•Social services and public housing
•Craftsmanship and service industries
•Internal administrative organization of Rome Capitale
Importantly, until Rome’s new laws are in place, any regional legislation from Lazio in these domains continues to apply.
Legislative Roadmap and Local Consultation
Complaint of the CDM only took about half an hour, shortly after which the constitutional text was approved. The bill comprises two articles:
•Article 1 modifies Article 114 to enshrine Rome Capitale as a distinct entity with special powers.
•Article 2 integrates other constitutional provisions—such as Articles 118, 119, 120, 127, and 134—into a framework for administrative and financial functions and constitutional safeguards.
For final passage, the proposal must go through four readings in both chambers of Parliament, approved by an absolute majority each time. Before that, consultations are required with the Regional Council of Lazio and Rome’s elective Assembly.
Government Reactions and Vision
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, in a video message, emphasized Rome’s distinctive role, stating:
“Rome Capitale is not just another city. Today’s reform inserts it among the Republic’s constituent entities and grants legislative powers over matters touching the daily life of Romans—urban planning, public transport, commerce, tourism, cultural heritage.”
Local representatives from the League party described the reform as a pivotal step forward:
“With legislative powers, Rome can finally thrive,” the statement says, aligning with their long-standing autonomist agenda focused on empowering local governance.
Outlook and Implications
This constitutional initiative marks a bold shift in Italy’s governance model. Rome Capitale is poised to operate more like Europe’s major capitals, with direct control over policy and fiscal levers previously overseen by the State or regional institutions.
If enacted, Rome may become a template for redefining capital governance in other unitary states. However, success hinges on careful implementation and the timely transfer of authority—which will be charted in detail by a subsequent State law.
While 2027 remains the anticipated launch point for the new institutional model—coinciding with the next local elections—the legislative trail ahead involves intensive dialogue and negotiation at multiple levels of government.
What’s new for Roma Capitale
Constitutional status
Explicit inclusion as a Republic entity under Article 114
Legislative power
Authority in key domains affecting daily life in the city
Financial autonomy
Special fiscal conditions envisaged under Article 119
Timeline
Targeted implementation with Assembly elections in 2027
This transformation places Rome on a new institutional footing, signaling both a symbolic and practical shift in how Italy’s capital is governed.
Let me know if you’d like deeper analysis on the implications for municipal finances, comparisons with other European capitals, or the legal hurdles ahead.

