The Greens have their roots in the New Left and the environmental movements of the 1970s. They started to compete in elections in 1978, but were formally registered as a party only in 1996. From 1978 to 1996 they used different names: New Left (1978), Alternative List (1983), Green Alternative List (1988) and finally Greens (since 1993).[4]Alexander Langer, founder and early leader of the party, committed suicide in 1995.[5]
In the 2008 provincial election, the Greens won only the 5.8% of the vote, losing votes (-2.1%) and one seat from 2003. The two elected Green councillors were Heiss and Riccardo Dello Sbarba,[6] who succeeded to Kusstatscher.
In the 2013 provincial election, the Greens won 8.7% of the vote (+2.9%),[9] their record high in a provincial election, and sent three elects to the Provincial Council: Heiss, Dello Sbarba and Brigitte Foppa.[10] In the 2014 European Parliament election the Greens supported The Other Europe, an electoral alliance launched by Italian Left (SI, successor of SEL) and other left-wing parties, but its candidate Oktavia Brugger was not elected.[11] In the 2015 municipal election in Merano, the second-largest South Tyrolean city, Green Paul Rösch was elected mayor with 60.7% of the vote in the run-off:[12][13] it was the first time that the Greens were to win a large municipality.
In the 2018 general election, Kronbichler did not stand again and the Greens continued to join forces with SI within the Free and Equal electoral list,[14] with Norbert Lantschner as its standard-bearer.[15] Lantschner was not elected and the Greens lost their representation in Parliament.
In July 2022, at a convention in Rome, spokesperson Marlene Pernstich participated the "New Energies" convention, that launched what would become the Greens and Left Alliance (AVS), a joint list for the 2022 general election formed by EV and SI.[18][19][20][21][22] In the election, the party obtained 7.7% of the vote in the Province.
In the 2023 provincial election, the Greens won 9.1% of the vote (+2.2pp) and again sent three elects to the Provincial Council. In the 2024 European Parliament election the Greens ran as part of AVS, with Foppa as standard-bearer,[23] garnering 15.8% of the vote.
Popular support
The Greens' best result in a provincial election was in 2023, when the party won 9.1% of the vote. In that occasion, the Greens obtained their highest share in Urtijëi (20.3%), but it generally ran strong in the largest cities and towns (12.8% in Merano, 11.7% in Bolzano, 10.3% in Bruneck and 10.1% in Brixen), while doing worse in the most rural districts – Wipptal (4.2%), Pustertal (6.3%) and Vinschgau (6.5%).[24] The party's best result was in the 2024 European Parliament election, where it received 15.8% of the vote.
The electoral results of the Greens in South Tyrol since 1987 are shown in the table below.
Joachim Gatterer, "rote milben im gefieder". Sozialdemokratische, kommunistische und grün-alternative Parteipolitik in Südtirol, StudienVerlag, Innsbruck/Vienna/Bolzano 2009, ISBN978-3-7065-4648-5