Piero Fassino Explained

Piero Fassino
Office:Mayor of Turin
Term Start:16 May 2011
Term End:20 June 2016
Predecessor:Sergio Chiamparino
Successor:Chiara Appendino
Office1:Minister of Justice
Primeminister1:Giuliano Amato
Term Start1:26 April 2000
Term End1:11 June 2001
Predecessor1:Oliviero Diliberto
Successor1:Roberto Castelli
Office2:Minister of Foreign Trade
Primeminister2:Massimo D'Alema
Term Start2:21 October 1998
Term End2:26 April 2000
Predecessor2:Augusto Fantozzi
Successor2:Enrico Letta
Office3:Secretary of the Democrats of the Left
Term Start3:18 November 2001
Term End3:14 October 2007
Predecessor3:Walter Veltroni
Successor3:Office abolished
Office4:Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Term Start4:23 March 2018
Constituency4:Emilia-Romagna (2018–2022)
Veneto (since 2022)
Term Start5:15 April 1994
Term End5:19 July 2011
Constituency5:Liguria (1994–1996)
Venaria Reale (1996–2006)
Piedmont (2006–2011)
Birth Date:7 October 1949
Birth Place:Avigliana, Italy
Party:PCI (1968–1991)
PDS (1991–1998)
DS (1998–2007)
PD (since 2007)
Spouse:Anna Maria Serafini
Alma Mater:University of Turin

Piero Franco Rodolfo Fassino (born 7 October 1949) is an Italian politician. He was Mayor of Turin from 2011 until 2016.[1]

Early life and education

Fassino was born in Avigliana, Piedmont (province of Turin), in a traditional socialist family. His father Eugenio was a partisan, commander of the 41st Garibaldi Brigade, and his paternal grandfather Piero was beaten to death by the Italian Fascists in 1944 because he did not want to reveal his son's hideout, while his maternal grandfather Cesare Grisa was one of the founders of the Italian Socialist Party. He graduated in Political Sciences.

Political career

Early career

Fassino registered with the Italian Communist Youth Federation of Turin in 1968. In 1975, he was elected as a Member of the City Council of the Piedmont regional capital, a position he remained in for ten years. From 1985 to 1990 he was Provincial Councillor, also in Turin. He was also secretary of the provincial Italian Communist Party (PCI) federation of Turin from 1983 to 1987, when he was elected as a member of the National Secretary's Office of the party, first as the Secretary's Office Coordinator, then as Responsible of Organization, during the period where the party was transformed from the PCI into the Democratic Party of the Left (PDS).

From 1991 to 1996, Fassino was International Secretary of the new party; in 1994 he was first elected to the Chamber of Deputies. Re-elected in 1996, he was appointed in 1998 as Minister for Foreign Commerce in the government headed by Massimo D'Alema. Between 2000 and 2001 he was Minister of Justice in the Giuliano Amato government. Candidate as vice-premier of The Olive Tree coalition in a ticket with former Rome Mayor Francesco Rutelli for the 2001 general elections in Italy won by the House of Freedoms rival coalition, he was still re-elected as a Member of Parliament.

In addition to his role in Parliament, Fassino was a member of Italian delegation to the Assembly of the Western European Union from 2006 until 2011, where he served as chairman of the Committee on Political Affairs and as rapporteur for the Western Balkans.[2]

From 2007 until 2010, Fassino served as the European Union's special envoy for Myanmar, appointed by the Union’s High Representative for Common Foreign and Security Policy, Javier Solana.[3]

Secretary of Democrats of the Left

In 2001, during the National Party Congress of the Democrats of the Left, Fassino was elected as secretary (a position of leader in Italian political parties). He was then re-elected in February 2005, during the party congress.

In 2003, Fassino and other high-ranking party members – including Romano Prodi, Lamberto Dini and Walter Veltroni – were accused of taking millions of pounds in backhanders when state-run Telecom Italia bought a 29% stake in Telekom Serbia in 1997.[4] During his time in office, Fassino asserted that Il Giornale, a right-wing newspaper, published confidential wiretap transcripts shortly before the 2006 election to create the impression that he had exercised improper pressure in the attempted takeover of Banca Nazionale del Lavoro by insurer Unipol in 2005. In 2013, a court awarded 80,000 euros in damages to Fassino for the incident.[5]

Mayor of Turin

Fassino served as Mayor of Turin from 2011 until 2016. In the 2016 elections, he was defeated by Chiara Appendino, who overturned an 11-point gap after the first round to win 55 per cent of the vote.[6]

Back to the Parliament

Fassino has been serving as a member of the Italian delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe since 2018.[7] As member of the Democratic Party, he is part of the Socialists, Democrats and Greens Group. In the Assembly, he serves on the Committee on the Honouring of Obligations and Commitments by Member States of the Council of Europe (since 2018); the Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy (since 2018); and the Sub-Committee on the Middle East and the Arab World (since 2019). He also serves as the Assembly's co-rapporteur on Serbia (alongside Ian Liddell-Grainger)[8] and Libya.[9]

Recognition

Fassino received the America Award from the Italy-USA Foundation in 2010.

Other activities

Personal life

Fassino is married to Anna Maria Serafini, who was elected to the Italian Senate in 2006. He considers himself Roman Catholic.[11]

Electoral history

width=8%Electionwidth=30%Housewidth=25%Constituencywidth=5% colspan="2"Partywidth=12%Voteswidth=12%Result
1994Chamber of DeputiesLiguriaPDS Elected
1996Chamber of DeputiesVenaria RealePDS35,887 Elected
2001Chamber of DeputiesVenaria RealeDS42,871 Elected
2006Chamber of DeputiesPiedmont 1DS Elected
2008Chamber of DeputiesPiedmont 1PD Elected
2018Chamber of DeputiesEmilia-Romagna 2PD Elected
2022Chamber of DeputiesVeneto 1PD Elected

External links

References

|-|-|-

Notes and References

  1. https://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000085&sid=aH26NKuzaLeg&refer=europe Prodi Clears Final Hurdle as Deficit Pressures Mount
  2. https://www.politico.eu/article/house-of-the-living-dead/ House of the living dead
  3. Toby Vogel (November 14, 2007), EU wants Asean to turn screw on Myanmar European Voice.
  4. Sophie Arie (September 1, 2003), Kickback claims hit Italian left The Guardian.
  5. Manuela D'Alessandro (March 7, 2013), Berlusconi sentenced in wiretap trial Reuters.
  6. Crispian Balmer and Gavin Jones (19 June 2016), Blow for Italy's PM as 5-Star makes breakthrough in mayoral vote Reuters.
  7. https://pace.coe.int/en/members/5784/fassino Piero Fassino
  8. https://pace.coe.int/en/news/7970/monitoring-co-rapporteurs-for-serbia-deeply-concerned-by-financial-investigations-against-prominent-ngos-and-media Monitoring co-rapporteurs for Serbia deeply concerned by financial investigations against prominent NGOs and media
  9. https://pace.coe.int/en/news/8031 Rapporteur welcomes inter-Libyan dialogue in Bouznika
  10. http://www.ecfr.eu/council/members Members of the Council
  11. News: E Fassino rivela Sono credente. Ceccarelli. Filippo. And Fassino reveals: I'm a believer. la Repubblica - Archivio. 27 September 2005.