Why Italy
Made It Harder to Become Italian
The
government says it tightened citizenship rules because of a deluge of
applications from the descendants of emigrants who only coveted an Italian
passport.
Patricia
Mazzei
By Patricia
Mazzei
Reporting
from Rome
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/01/world/europe/italy-citizenship-rules.html
April 1,
2025
People of
Italian descent have for decades been able to dig through their family trees,
find an Italian ancestor and apply for citizenship to Italy, securing a
powerful passport that allows them to enter more countries without a visa than
travelers of almost any other nationality.
But so many
have tried to claim the benefit that their applications have congested Italy’s
courts, consulates and municipal offices, grinding other work to a near halt.
The
government has had enough.
Fewer people
of Italian descent will now be able to obtain citizenship after the government
narrowed eligibility only to those with Italian parents or grandparents.
The decree,
announced on Friday and effective immediately, strips away a provision that had
allowed all comers to seek citizenship if they could prove — often through a
lengthy and laborious process — that they had an Italian ancestor who was alive
after the country was formed in 1861.
Antonio
Tajani, the Italian foreign minister, said the stricter regulations followed
“years of abuses” by people who had few ties to the country and only coveted
its passport.
Italy has
granted citizenship in recent years to a surging number of South Americans, Mr.
Tajani said, suggesting that many new Italians mainly hoped to travel around
Europe or to the United States. “Being an Italian citizen is a serious thing,”
he said at a news conference. “It’s not a game to get a passport in your pocket
to go shopping in Miami.”
The move
comes as many countries are rethinking who can be a citizen in response to a
sharp rise in migration. In Italy, as in much of Europe, immigration law has
been largely based on bloodlines, allowing the country to maintain ties with
the descendants of millions of Italians who fled poverty and war in the 19th
and 20th centuries.
Yet Italy is
facing a demographic crisis as the population ages and the birthrate plummets.
Critics say it is unfair for Italy to grant citizenship to people with
long-lost ancestry while denying birthright citizenship to the children of
immigrants, including those with legal status. Italy allows children of lawful
immigrants to become citizens only once they have turned 18 and if they have
lived in the country since birth.
Mr. Tajani
said the government would pursue legislation that would allow the children or
grandchildren of Italian citizens to obtain citizenship if they reside in Italy
for two or three years, instead of the five or 10 years required for European
citizens and other foreigners.
That the
government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, a nationalist, chose to impose
restrictions on bloodline citizenship surprised and upset some on the political
right, who argue that the government should preserve Italian cultural and
ethnic identity.
But Mr.
Tajani said a lucrative cottage industry had profited from charging would-be
Italians thousands of dollars to find ancestral records and submit citizenship
applications. “We cannot encourage cheating or fake citizenship,” he said,
holding up printouts of the companies’ ads on social media. One advertised a
Black Friday special.
A surge in
applications is overwhelming some of Italy’s institutions, with courts
struggling to process requests and small towns inundated with requests for old
birth, death and marriage records. Consular appointments are so scarce that
Italian citizens abroad routinely log on to an online portal at midnight Italy
time to try to secure one.
The number
of Italian citizens abroad grew about 40 percent over the last decade, to 6.4
million in 2024 from 4.6 million in 2014, in large part because of newly minted
citizens, Mr. Tajani said. Italy granted citizenship to some 30,000 people in
Argentina last year, up from 20,000 in 2023, and to around 20,000 people in
Brazil, up from 14,000. (One Argentine who received Italian citizenship when he
visited Rome in December: President Javier Milei.)
Alberto
Teso, the mayor of San Donà di Piave, a city near Venice, told the public
broadcaster RAI in February that half of his staff worked full-time on
citizenship applications for people — most of them from Brazil — who “will
never set foot in our city.”
Even before
the decree was announced on Friday, Italy had already started rejecting more
citizenship applications.
In October,
the Interior Ministry issued a memo based on recent rulings from the Italian
Supreme Court that more narrowly interpreted citizenship law. It said that if
applicants Italian ancestors had voluntarily acquired a new nationality while
their children were minors, those children automatically lost their Italian
citizenship. That meant the citizenship chain was broken.
The memo
left scores of applicants with limited recourse, even if they had been engaged
in the citizenship process for years. Reddit threads and Facebook groups
sharing advice on how to obtain citizenship filled with posts lamenting the
time, effort and money lost.
Patricia
Mazzei is the lead reporter for The Times in Miami, covering Florida and Puerto
Rico. More about Patricia Mazzei
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