Vittorio Coco

Vittorio Coco (born November 11, 1939) is an Italian and Canadian journalist and politician. He has worked at CHIN radio in Toronto since 1973 and was for many years the host of an Italian-language morning program. Coco ran for the Italian Senate in the 2006 and 2008 general elections.

Early life and career

Coco was born in Roccagorga, a small town near Rome. He studied journalism in Rome and worked in print media after graduating.

He moved to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, in 1959 and intended to start an Italian-language newspaper in the city (at the time, he has noted, there were no Italian journals in Canada west of Winnipeg). He instead became involved in radio, overseeing Italian-language programming at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's CHFA in Edmonton and broadcasting from Expo '67 in Montreal, Quebec.[1]

Toronto broadcaster

Coco joined CHIN radio in Toronto in 1972 as its news director. Later in the same year, he became the debut host of "Wake-Up Italian Style," the station's Italian-language morning show.[2] He celebrated his twenty-sixth year on the air in 1998, excepting a short period of time in the 1970s when he hosted an afternoon program. Under Coco's watch, "Wake-Up Italian Style" featured a combination of music and spoken-word content, including new hit material from Italy.[3] Coco has also worked for "Festival Italiano di Johnny Lombardi" program on CHIN-TV.

Politician

Coco ran for the Italian Senate in the 2006 and 2008 general elections in a division reserved for Italian citizens living in North American and Central America. He was a candidate of the Union of Christian and Centre Democrats in 2006 and ran for its successor party, the Union of the Centre, in 2008. He was defeated on both occasions. Coco received credible support in Toronto in 2006, but did not poll well elsewhere.[4]

Coco identifies as a Roman Catholic and has said he has always supported the Christian Democrats and successor parties in Italian politics.[5] He has served as the Union of the Centre's political secretary in Canada.[6]

Electoral record

Party Votes % Senators
   People of Freedom 38,896 44.96 1
   Democratic Party 38,103 44.04
   Union of the Centre 7,330 8.47
   The Right–Tricolour Flame 2,193 2.53
Total valid votes 86,522 100.00
People of Freedom candidate preference votes
Basilio Giordano (elected) 13,083
Augusto Sorriso 8,699
Democratic Party candidate preference votes
(x)Renato Turano 15,223
Marina Piazzi 7,431
Union of the Centre candidate preference votes
Massimo Seracini 2,194
Vittorio Coco 1,791
The Right–Tricolour Flame candidate preference votes
Giuseppe Cirnigliaro 544
Franco Misuraca 461

Source: ARCHIVIO STORICO DELLE ELEZIONI - Consultazione dati: Senato 13/04/2008, Area ESTERO, Ripartizione AMERICA SETTENTRIONALE E CENTRALE, Ministerio dell'Interno, Government of Italy, accessed 27 July 2011. Voters were not required to give a preference vote for any candidate.

Party Votes % Senators
   The Union 32,036 38.03 1
   Forza Italia 25,556 30.33
   For Italy in the World with Tremaglia 11,604 13.77
   Union of Christian and Centre Democrats 9,412 11.17
   Independent Alternative for Italians Abroad 3,191 3.79
   Northern League 1,389 1.65
   Tricolour Flame 1,061 1.26
Total valid votes 84,249 100.00
The Union candidate preference votes
Renato Turano (elected) 12,097
Rocco di Trolio 7,675
Forza Italia candidate preference votes
Augusto Sorriso 8,898
Liborio Zambito 5,387
For Italy in the World with Tremaglia candidate preference votes
Carlo Consiglio 5,446
Vincenzo Centofanti 2,531
Union of Christian and Centre Democrats candidate preference votes
Vittorio Coco 3,906
Bernardo Paradiso 2,885
Independent Alternative for Italians Abroad candidate preference votes
Domenico Serafini detto Dom 1,471
Sonia Marcella Spadoni 922
Northern League candidate preference votes
Salvatore Rappa 807
Tricolour Flame candidate preference votes
Alfredo Viti 415

Source: ARCHIVIO STORICO DELLE ELEZIONI - Consultazione dati: Senato 09/04/2006, Area ESTERO, Ripartizione AMERICA SETTENTRIONALE E CENTRALE, Ministerio dell'Interno, Government of Italy, accessed 27 July 2011. Voters were not required to give a preference vote for any candidate.

gollark: Lots of stuff cannot particularly be done as WFH, so in most cases you probably cannot just stay home conveniently.
gollark: ... work?
gollark: Or feel socially pressured to because other people are, or just don't really know either way.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: It's not like deciding to not stay at home only affects you.

References

  1. Peter Goddard, "Hed goes here," Toronto Star, 10 October 1998, p. 1.
  2. Zena Cherry, "Party honors Shakespeare, aids Festival," Globe and Mail, 25 April 1984, M4; "Radio jocks cooking for sick kids," Toronto Star, 27 May 1988, D18; Michael Prini, "The New Language of Selling," The Metropolitan Toronto Business Journal, October 1988, p. 30; Peter Goddard, "Hed goes here," Toronto Star, 10 October 1998, p. 1.
  3. Peter Goddard, "Hed goes here," Toronto Star, 10 October 1998, p. 1.
  4. Marina Jiménez, "When not in Rome, vote, as Romans do," Globe and Mail, 6 March 2006, A4; Sandro Contenta, "Italians might return to polls," Toronto Star, 11 April 2006, A1.
  5. "Who Is Vittorio Coco", vittoriococo.net, accessed 3 August 2011.
  6. "Vittorio Coco’s UDC party platform: Senate candidate calls for immigration control and promotion of Italian language", Corriere Canadese Weekend (Tandem), 6 April 2008, accessed 3 August 2011.
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