Giorgio Stracquadanio

Giorgio Clelio Stracquadanio (22 March 1959 – 31 January 2014) was an Italian politician and journalist.

Giorgio Clelio Stracquadanio
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
29 April 2008  14 March 2013
Member of the Senate
In office
28 April 2006  28 April 2008
Personal details
Born(1959-03-22)22 March 1959
Milan
Died31 January 2014(2014-01-31) (aged 54)
Milan
Political partyPR (1980s-1989)
FI (1996-2009)
PdL (2009-2012)
IL (2012-2013)
Occupationpolitician, journalist

Biography

Born in Milan, Stracquadanio began his political career in the 1980s as an activist for the Radical Party in Milan with the municipal councillor Tiziana Maiolo.[1][2]

In 1996 he ran unsuccessfully as an MP for Silvio Berlusconi's Polo delle Libertà.

In 2006 he was elected to the Italian Senate with Forza Italia.[3] While still taking part in Forza Italia's activities, he joined the parliamentary group "Democrazia Cristiana per le Autonomie" to allow them to reach the minimum required quorum for group constitution. As a legislator he rejected a proposal for the diminishing of members of parliament's salaries and benefits.[4]

In 2006 he was elected to be a member of the General Council of the Transnational Radical Party.[5]

In the 2008 general elections, he was not elected but received the seat of Cristiana Muscardini who opted instead to serve in the European Parliament. He then sat with the People of Freedom in the Italian Chamber of Deputies.

Stracquadanio also worked as a journalist with the right-wing newspaper Libero, for which he edited some political pamphlets.

In 2009-2010, Stracquadanio was criticized for many controversial statements, including:

  • the delegitimisation of dissent in Berlusconi's party, the opposition to the explicit choice of MPs by electors, the support to ad personam laws favouring Silvio Berlusconi[6]
  • insults towards a left-wing journalist during a press conference[7][8]
  • request to libel Gianfranco Fini to force his dismissal, as with Dino Boffo[8][9]
  • downplaying of 2009 L'Aquila earthquake[7]
  • legitimizing prostitution to gain access to public posts, and stating that if a female MP were discovered to have been selected in return for sexual favours, there would be no reason for her to resign, or even to feel embarrassed; he stated his position after Angela Napoli (MP of the same party) had remarked that she could not exclude the possibility that some women MPs and senators had been selected in this manner.[10][11]

In July 2012 he left Berlusconi's party and in December of the same year joined the political project built by Mario Monti.[12] Stracquadanio died of lung cancer on January 31, 2014 at the age of 54.[12]

gollark: Oh, metis contains things now?
gollark: Yep!
gollark: SO VERY OFTEN I wanted to split a string in some way. But Lua doesn't have the ability to do that. It is very annoying.
gollark: Oh, a big one Lua doesn't have for some stupid reason - SPLITTING STRINGS.
gollark: Might be useful to add that to the potatOS `*` operator support on strings, somehow.

References

  1. Archivio Corriere.it
  2. Archivio Corriere.it
  3. Scheda su Senato.it
  4. RaiNews24 - I senatori non so riducono lo stipendio - 8 novembre 2007.
  5. "Mauro Suttora: Il maestro Pannella e la scuola radicale: come impossessarsi di una poltrona per sempre!". Archived from the original on 2009-09-10. Retrieved 2010-09-13.
  6. Stracquadanio, il fedelissimo del premier che ha lanciato il Sì-B-Day, Il Fatto Quotidiano, 20 novembre 2009
  7. Stampa, giustizia e cassintegrati, la calda estate di Stracquadanio, La Repubblica, 12 settembre 2010
  8. Bracconi su Repubblica.it
  9. Avvenire contro Stracquadanio "Fini come Boffo? Si vergogni", La Repubblica, 1° agosto 2010
  10. Stracquadanio: "Legittimo prostituirsi se si vuole fare carriera", La Repubblica, 13 settembre 2010.
  11. Squires, Nick (14 September 2010), "Women should use bodies to get ahead in politics, says Berlusconi ally", Daily Telegraph, retrieved 5 November 2011
  12. "È morto Giorgio Stracquadanio". La Stampa. 31 January 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
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