Synonyms for clemente_mastella or Related words with clemente_mastella

francesco_rutelli              angelino_alfano              matteo_salvini              dario_franceschini              emma_bonino              piero_fassino              massimo_alema              renato_brunetta              francesco_speroni              roberto_maroni              benedetto_della_vedova              maurizio_sacconi              roberto_formigoni              walter_veltroni              mario_borghezio              pier_luigi_bersani              umberto_bossi              luca_romagnoli              udeur              mario_monti              gianfranco_rotondi              enrico_boselli              gianfranco_fini              paolo_gentiloni              raffaele_fitto              giulio_tremonti              liga_veneta_lega_nord              communist_refoundation_party              marco_pannella              achille_occhetto              roberto_cota              giancarlo_galan              roberto_calderoli              matteo_renzi              giovanni_spadolini              rosy_bindi              enrico_letta              pino_rauti              rocco_buttiglione              fausto_bertinotti              partito_popolare_italiano              stefano_caldoro              pier_ferdinando_casini              giorgia_meloni              willer_bordon              psdi              gentiloni              bruno_tabacci              marco_cappato              fabrizio_cicchitto             



Examples of "clemente_mastella"
Ceppaloni is named in Italy as the place of birth of Italian politician Clemente Mastella
The party was formed in February 1998 as a splinter group from the Christian Democratic Centre (CCD). Their leader was Clemente Mastella, until then President of that party.
Most reactions on the centre-left were comprehensibly enthusiastic, especially because of the high number of participants. Clemente Mastella, however, accused the organization of rigging the election and having pre-printed ballots in favour of Prodi.
Most reactions on the centre-left were comprehensibly enthusiastic, especially because of the high number of participants. Clemente Mastella, however, accused the organization of rigging the election and having pre-printed ballots in favour of Prodi.
As his investigations involved famous names such as Romano Prodi, former Italian prime Minister, and Clemente Mastella, former Italian Minister of Justice, de Magistris has been at the centre of media controversy.
This investigation is about illegal use of public funding. The name of the former Italian Minister of Justice Clemente Mastella appears in the investigation, thanks to his contacts with Antonio Saladino, a key figure in the enquiry.
Cardinale was elected to the Italian Parliament in 1996. He later joined the centrist UDEUR under Clemente Mastella. Cardinale worked as a business manager and is a law schooled graduate.
Clemente Mastella claimed, already on the election day, that too few ballots had been provided in areas where his party is stronger, and that several pre-marked voting papers, pre-marked with votes for Prodi, have been prepared in order to let him lose. No one other than Mastella backed up these claims inside the coalition, and material evidence was not presented.
Clemente Mastella claimed, already on the election day, that too few ballots had been provided in areas where his party is stronger, and that several pre-marked voting papers, pre-marked with votes for Prodi, have been prepared in order to let him lose. No one other than Mastella backed up these claims inside the coalition, and material evidence was not presented.
Along with Paul Ginsborg, Marcello Flores, Sergio Luzzatto, Claudio Pavone, Enzo Traverso, etc., Ginzburg called, in January 2002, for the rejection of a bill, presented by Justice Minister Clemente Mastella, that would have outlawed Holocaust denial. They argued that Italy's legislation was sufficient to cope with such acts. The amended bill finally restricted itself to reinforcing sentences concerning hate speech.
At the time of the foundation of CPR, it was seen as a political laboratory for the country, in order to put together centrist parties of The Olive Tree, the then-governing centre-left coalition. Leading national politicians, including Franco Marini, Clemente Mastella, Rocco Buttiglione, Lamberto Dini and Giorgio La Malfa.
The Minister of Justice Clemente Mastella asked de Magistris to be transferred because he had allegedly revealed Mastella's name as well as those of other Italian politicians apparently involved in his investigations. De Magistris appeared before the CSM (the governing board of the magistracy) in January 2008 to defend himself against the serious allegations of the Minister and his inspectors.
It was launched on 11 October 2008 by Clemente Mastella and Publio Fiori, respectively leaders of UDEUR–Populars and the Christian Democratic Refoundation. The coalition, which describes itself as a "network", is aimed at representing those centrist parties which lost representation in the Italian Parliament in the 2008 general election or never gained such representation.
One of the most important inquiries done by Clementina Forleo involved the purchase of Banca Antonveneta in the so-called Bancopoli scandal. This brought her harsh criticism by many members (Clemente Mastella, Massimo D'Alema) of the center-left coalition headed by Premier Romano Prodi.
Later, on 24 January 2008 the Prodi II Cabinet went through a new crisis, because the Minister of Justice, Clemente Mastella, retracted his support to the Cabinet. Consequently, the Prodi Cabinet lost the vote of confidence and the President Giorgio Napolitano called a new general election.
On 16 January 2008 Clemente Mastella, who was under investigation by prosecutor Luigi de Magistris, resigned as Minister of Justice and on 21 January decided to withdraw his party's support to Romano Prodi, who himself resigned after a vote of confidence in the Senate on 24 January, clearing the way toward a snap election.
Clemente Mastella and the President of the Sicilian Region Salvatore Cuffaro were involved in a scandal when it was found that they had been the best men of Francesco Campanella, a former member of the Mafia that helped the boss Bernardo Provenzano during his absconding. In July 2000, Mastella was a witness at Campanella's wedding.
It was founded in February 1998 by Francesco Cossiga (former Prime Minister and President) in order to provide a majority in Parliament for the creation of the D'Alema I Cabinet. The party also included Clemente Mastella (ex-Christian Democratic Centre, then leader of the Christian Democrats for the Republic), Rocco Buttiglione (leader of the United Christian Democrats), Mario Segni (leader of Segni Pact), Carlo Scognamiglio Pasini (ex-FI), Enrico Ferri (ex-CCD) and Irene Pivetti (ex-Lega Nord), along with many other MPs elected for the centre-right. Cossiga'a sim was to facilitate the creation of a centre-left governments without the support of the Communist Refoundation Party. The UDR was initially only a federation of parties, but in June CDR, CDU and the Segni Pact merged to form a united party. Clemente Mastella was elected Secretary of the new party. The party formed The Clover ("Il Trifoglio") alliance with the Italian Republican Party and Italian Democratic Socialists.
Ginsborg is of Jewish parentage. Along with Carlo Ginzburg, Marcello Flores, Sergio Luzzatto, Claudio Pavone, Enzo Traverso, etc., he signed a call in January 2002 against a law project, presented by Justice Minister Clemente Mastella, which was to specifically penalize Holocaust denial. They argued that Italy's legislation was sufficient to cope with such acts. The amended law project finally restricted itself to reinforcing sentences concerning hate speech.
The Union of Democrats for Europe (, UDEUR), whose latest official name has been UDEUR Populars ("Popolari UDEUR"), was a centrist and Christian-democratic political party in Italy. Led by Clemente Mastella, the party has been at times very strong in Southern Italy, but almost irrelevant in Northern Italy. After a decline in terms of popularity in 2007–2008, the party resists only in Campania, Mastella's heartland, and few other regions.