A regional council (Consiglio regionale) in Italy is the elected legislative assembly of a region of Italy. In Sicily and Valley of Aosta, the legislative body is called Sicilian Regional Assembly (Assemblea regionale siciliana) and Council of the Valley (Consiglio della Valle) respectively.
The regional idea was born, in Italy, during the national Risorgimento and the first decades after the Unification of Italy, but any proposal was rejected until the Second World War. After the collapse of Fascism and the end of the war a violent independence movement that led to the institution of the region and the concession of the Statute, based on the model of federal states was born in Sicily. A similar route followed Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Sardinia, Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol and Valley of Aosta.
The other regions were instituted by the Constitution of 1948, but the first elections of regional councils were in 1970.
Councils had the power to elect the president and other members (assessors) of regional government (Giunta Regionale). With the constitutional reforms of 1999 and 2001, they lost these powers (because the president is elected by the people and the assessors are appointed by the president). On the other hand, the regional councils obtained a lot of new legislative powers, including the regional electoral system, which had been decided by the State.