AP News52%

US families contest Italian law restricting citizenship by descent in highest court 

By COLLEEN BARRY0% SILVIA STELLACCI

4/14/2026, 12:35:51 PM

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ROME (AP)  Two U.S. families went to Italy’s highest court Tuesday to challenge the scope of a year-old law passed by Giorgia Meloni’s government limiting citizenship claims to Italian descendants removed by more than two generations. 
Their lawyer, Marco Mellone, argued before the Cassation Court that the law should apply only to people born after it took effect, potentially opening a pathway to citizenship for millions of people living in the United States and parts of Latin America. 
Another lawyer represented Italian descendants from Venezuela. 
A decision by an expanded panel, which makes the ruling binding in lower courts, is expected in the coming weeks. 
Mellone’s case would clarify the citizenship rights of the descendants of some 14 million Italians who emigrated between 1877 and 1914, according to Foreign Ministry statistics, and beyond. 
While Mellone’s case involves two families, another dozen people whose citizenship claims were stopped by the law were present outside the courthouse in solidarity. 
Karen Bonadio said she hopes one day to move to Italy on the strength of her ancestry. 
She brought photos of her as a young girl alongside her Italian-born great-grandparents, who emigrated from Basilicata in southern Italy to upstate New York, along with their birth certificates. 
“The new law says, ‘all these great-grandchildren didn’t know their great-grandparents.’ 
This is from 1963, I think I was 3 ½,’’ she said, showing the photograph. 
At least one of Mellone’s cases had been rejected in lower courts before the new law, hinging partially on rulings that Italian emigrants who took on another citizenship before having children cannot pass on Italian citizenship. 
Jennifer Daly’s case has been working its way through the Italian bureaucracy for nearly a decade. 
Her grandfather, Giuseppe Dallfollo, immigrated to the U.S. in 1912 from the northern province of Trento when it was under Austro-Hungarian control. 
He later married an Italian woman and brought her over, and at some point became a naturalized U.S. citizen. 
Daly said she always had a strong Italian identity that transcended her last name anglicized by U.S. immigration officials. 
She petitioned for citizenship because “it is truly a recognition of who I am, where I am from. 
It’s so much more than citizenship. 
It’s everything,’' Daly, a retired history professor, said by phone from Salina, Kansas. 
Outside the courthouse, Alexis Traino said great-grandparents on both her maternal and paternal sides had come from Italy, where she now lives, mainly in Florence. 
“My entire life, I grew up knowing  and my parents always emphasized  that I was Italian. 
I had a very, very strong connection with Italy,” said Traino, 34, who was waiting for documents from Italy and the U.S. when the law passed, blocking her case. 
“I want to be Italian. 
I want to contribute to Italy and be a citizen,’’ she said. 
___ 
Barry reported from Milan. 
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